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Query: UMLS:C0024591 (
malignant hyperthermia
)
2,353
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Malignant hyperthermia
is a main cause of death during general anesthesia, particularly in children. However, research has been hampered by the lack of a convenient animal model, the only one available being a special strain of pig. In this study, we describe spontaneous
myopathy
and a fatal syndrome of generalized muscle rigidity triggered by halothane in an outbred strain of rat. Histological examination of skeletal muscle reveals severe abnormalities indicating chronic underlying
myopathy
. The association of histological abnormalities with an acute, fatal syndrome clinically resembling
malignant hyperthermia
provides a strong basis for a new and extremely useful animal model to study this fatal disorder.
...
PMID:A rat model of spontaneous myopathy and malignant hyperthermia. 954 71
The preoperative evaluation of the enzymatic level concerning the functioning of the neuromuscular system, is of particular importance. The diseases of these regions may lead to
Malignant Hyperthermia
(MH) in the course of general anaesthesia. The authors illustrate the case of a young asymptomatic patient with constantly high levels of CPK, who was later affected by Central Core Disease (CCD), a rare hereditary slow progressing
myopathy
strictly related to MH. The authors suggest tat preoperative CPK levels, though not predictive of a patient to develop MH, can allow identification of patients affected by clinically silent myopathies. This can also acquire legal importance in case of clinical MH manifestation.
...
PMID:[Muscular enzyme level disorders and a malignant hyperthermia susceptability test: postoperative study of a patient with elevated CPK]. 965 90
The King syndrome is characterized by a Noonan-like phenotype, the presence of a nonspecific
myopathy
and a predisposition to
malignant hyperthermia
. In some families, mild physical manifestations of the phenotype and/or elevated serum creatine phosphokinase (CPK) in relatives suggest the presence of an autosomal dominant
myopathy
with variable expressivity. We summarize the cases of 14 previously reported patients and describe a new patient, a 7-year-old girl, with the King syndrome and the unique findings of diaphragmatic eventration, tethered spinal cord, and severe paucity of type 2 skeletal muscle fibers. It has been proposed that the King syndrome represents a common phenotype that may result from several different slowly progressive congenital myopathies. This hypothesis, and the phenotypic overlap between the King and Noonan syndromes are discussed in light of the findings in this new patient.
...
PMID:King syndrome: further clinical variability and review of the literature. 967 61
Our knowledge of the mechanisms leading to exercise intolerance is constantly expanding. Since the discovery of the glycolysis pathway block caused by phosphorylase deficiency as the cause of McArdle's disease, several other glycolysis blocks have been identified constituting a first group of exercise intolerance syndromes. A second group involves mitochondrial anomalies. More recently diverse exercise intolerance syndromes have been associated with insufficient regulation of calcium flow through the sarcoplasmic reticulum, particularly in sporadic cases of
malignant hyperthermia
with or without hyperthermia. A discrete form of dystrophinopathy is expressed by exercise-induced myalgia with myoglobinuria. Proximal myotonic
myopathy
also produces pain at exercise. The specificity of other syndromes such as AMP deaminase deficiency or
myopathy
with tubular aggregates remains debatable. Our understanding of these different syndromes, and their recognized or yet to be elucidated causes, is of practical significance for developing exploration protocols for patients with exercise intolerance with or without myoglobulinuria.
...
PMID:[Muscular intolerance of exercise. Current data]. 983 85
The perioperative management of a 14-year-old girl, suffering from the
muscular disorder
rigid spine syndrome, is presented. The anaesthetic implications with regard to possible difficult intubation, cardiac involvement,
malignant hyperthermia
, neuromuscular blocking agents, and postoperative recovery are discussed.
...
PMID:Anaesthetic implications of rigid spine syndrome. 1041 75
Malignant hyperthermia
(MH) in man is an autosomal dominant disorder of skeletal muscle Ca(2+)-regulation. During anesthesia in predisposed individuals, it is triggered by volatile anesthetics and depolarizing muscle relaxants. In >50% of the families, MH susceptibility is linked to the gene encoding the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor (RYR1), the calcium release channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum, on chromosome 19q12-13.2. To date, 21 RYR1 mutations have been identified in a number of pedigrees. Four of them are also associated with central core disease (CCD), a congenital
myopathy
. Screening for these 21 mutations in 105 MH families including 10 CCD families phenotyped by the in vitro contracture test (IVCT) according to the European protocol revealed the following approximate distribution: 9% Arg-614-Cys, 1% Arg-614-Leu, 1% Arg-2163-Cys, 1% Val-2168-Met, 3% Thr-2206-Met and 7% Gly-2434-Arg. In one CCD family, the disease was caused by a recently reported MH mutation, Arg-2454-His. Two novel mutations, Thr-2206-Arg and Arg-2454-Cys were detected, each in a single pedigree. In the 109 individuals of the 25 families with RYR1 mutations cosegregation between genetic result and IVCT was almost perfect, only three genotypes were discordant with the IVCT phenotypes, suggesting a true sensitivity of 98.5% and a specificity of minimally 81.8% for this test. Screening of the transmembraneous region of RYR1 did not yield a new mutation confirming the cytosolic portion of the protein to be of main functional importance for disease pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Screening of the ryanodine receptor gene in 105 malignant hyperthermia families: novel mutations and concordance with the in vitro contracture test. 1048 75
Malignant Hyperthermia
(MH) represents a functional
myopathy
triggered by volatile anesthetics and depolarizing muscle relaxants, and leading to metabolic disturbances of intracellular Calcium homeostasis. Central-Core-like-structures (CCLS) were recently described as central defects in enzyme-histochemical stains and well correlated to the autosomal-dominant MH-predisposition. We studied the correlation of a MH-predisposition with specific myopathological signs. Skeletal muscles of suspected MH-individuals were histochemically stained by SDH-, NADH-, COX-, Gomori-Trichrome-, ATPase-, Acid Phosphatase-, Oil-red O- und PAS-stain und evaluated without knowing MH-diagnosis by the in-vitro-contracture test. Out of 118 patients (30%
MHS
["susceptible"], 63% MHN [normal], 7% MHE ["equivocal"]) 19% revealed pathological findings corresponding to CCLS. 45% of these findings were associated with
MHS
/MHE. With HE-staining internal nuclei were not specific, but increased with the probability of
MHS
/MHE from 24% to 80%. Central Cores were correlated in 100% with
MHS
/MHE (4 out of 118 patients). CCLS were found with about similar frequency in skeletal muscle of
MHS
/MHE and MHN individuals. Internal nuclei were, however, not specifically, associated with
MHS
. In contrast, Central Cores correlated significantly with
MHS
/MHE diagnosis. In conclusion, histopathological findings in skeletal muscle seem to be a reliable marker for MH-predisposition only with Central Cores.
...
PMID:[Are morphologic changes in skeletal muscles of patients with malignant hyperthermia diagnostically useful?]. 1054 59
Malignant hyperthermia
(MH) is an autosomal dominant disorder presenting under general anaesthesia. It is occasionally associated with a
myopathy
, central core disease (CCD), named after its predominant histochemical characteristic. The penetration of CCD is variable, but typically affected individuals show delayed motor milestones in infancy and remain physically compromised. It was thought until recently that individuals with CCD were always susceptible to MH. Individuals from eight CCD families were screened for the presence of 13 mutations in the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor gene, reported previously to be associated with MH and/or CCD: none was detected. In seven of these families, where CCD and MH co-existed, we examined the segregation of CCD, MH susceptibility and chromosome 19q markers. In four families, there was complete co-segregation between MH, CCD and the chromosome 19 markers, but in one large pedigree there was a clear lack of segregation of CCD with either MH or chromosome 19 markers and there was no segregation between MH and these markers. This is unequivocal evidence that CCD, in common with MH, is genetically heterogeneous. In the two other families, CCD segregated with chromosome 19 markers but not all individuals with CCD were susceptible to MH. We recommend determination of MH susceptibility in all patients with CCD, irrespective of the MH status of their relatives with CCD.
...
PMID:Segregation of malignant hyperthermia, central core disease and chromosome 19 markers. 1061 32
Malignant hyperthermia
susceptibility (MHS), a skeletal
muscle disorder
, is mostly inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. Exposure of susceptible individuals to volatile halogenated anaesthetics can lead to a MH episode resulting in irreversible tissue damages or to the patient's death if not immediately reversed by dantrolene treatment. A MH episode is characterised by a combination of hyperthermia, skeletal muscle rigidity and hypermetabolism. Porcine stress syndrome has proved to be a valuable model for physiopathological studies of MHS.
Malignant hyperthermia
syndrome is associated with a failure of the calcium homeostasis in muscular fibres. Dysfunction of the calcium channels: the ryanodine receptor (RyR) and the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR), which are involved in the release of the Ca2+ stored in sarcoplasmic reticulum has been clearly demonstrated. A biochemical test based on the analysis of the in vitro contracture response of muscular fibres to caffeine and halothane was developed to define the MHS status of patients. Although the genetic analysis of MHS has beneficiated from recent progresses, genetic testing is still far to answer to all testing situations. If in swine, hyperthermia syndrome was always associated with a unique mutation of the RyR1 gene, genetic analysis is far more complicated in human: i) more than 20 different MHS mutations in the RyR1 gene have been described; ii) a mutation of the gene encoding the dihydropyridine receptor has been identified; iii) 4 other potential MHS loci have been reported.
...
PMID:[Biology of malignant hyperthermia: a disease of the calcium channels of the skeletal muscle]. 1076 Jul 1
The expression of thrombomodulin and neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) was studied immunocytochemically in biopsied muscle specimens from 10 patients with rhabdomyolysis with different etiologic factors, including 5 with
malignant hyperthermia
. We have already reported that thrombomodulin was expressed on regenerating muscle cell membranes as well as on vessel walls in patients with various neuromuscular diseases, including Duchenne muscular dystrophy, Becker muscular dystrophy and inflammatory
myopathy
. We found increased expression of thrombomodulin not only on the sarcolemma, but also in the sarcoplasm of a fair number of muscle fibers in the acute phase of rhabdomyolysis. The granular pattern of thrombomodulin expression in the sarcoplasm seems to be a characteristic finding in the acute phase of rhabdomyolysis. Most muscle fibers which expressed NCAM on the sarcolemma also expressed thrombomodulin. However, the muscle fibers which expressed thrombomodulin in the sarcoplasm did not express NCAM, and showed a degenerative appearance on electron microscopic examination. These results suggest that thrombomodulin is expressed in the sarcoplasm during the acute degeneration phase of rhabdomyolysis in addition to the expression on the sarcolemma during the muscle fiber regeneration as shown in our previous study, and the former process, which is characterized by the granular expression of thrombomodulin in the sarcoplasm, may be a characteristic finding in rhabdomyolysis.
...
PMID:Characteristic expression of thrombomodulin in the muscle sarcoplasm in patients with the acute phase of rhabdomyolysis. 1076 59
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