Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSH) is an autosomal dominant condition with variable expressivity and age dependent penetrance. Linkage studies still did not exclude regions 11, 2q, 6q, 7p, 8p, 10q, 12p and 14p as possible locations for the FSH gene. In the present study we have analysed 80 individuals (36 patients and 44 normals) belonging to 8 unrelated Brazilian families with 3 probes located on the long arm of chromosome 6:MHB(6q22-q23),
ESR
(6q24-q27) and TCP1(6q25-q27). Results of linkage analysis suggest that the gene responsible for FSH
muscular dystrophy
is not in the region 6q23-q27.
...
PMID:Exclusion of the gene responsible for facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSH) at 6q23-q27. 188 11
Limb girdle
muscular dystrophy
type 2B is a rare subtype of
muscular dystrophy
, the predominant feature of which is muscle weakness. The disease is caused by an autosomal recessively inherited reduction/absence of muscle dysferlin due to a mutation in dysferlin gene at 2p12-14. We report a 10 year old boy who presented with severe non-transient right knee pain and swelling, which later became bilateral. His pain was worst in the morning and during rest. Blood tests revealed markedly raised creatine kinase values (highest 22, 297 U/l), raising the possibility of an inflammatory myositis. MRI showed bilateral asymmetrical muscle involvement of thighs and calves with oedematous changes mimicking the imaging appearances of inflammatory myositis. CRP and
ESR
levels were consistently within normal limits. Over several months his knee pain worsened and limited walking. Muscle biopsy revealed a severe reduction of dysferlin immunostaining, indicating the diagnosis, which was confirmed by 2 compound heterozygous pathogenic mutations in the dysferlin gene. It is not unusual for this subtype of the disease to mimic myositis: however, significant pain is a rare presenting symptom. Given the significant overlap between this form of
muscular dystrophy
and inflammatory myopathies, a high index of suspicion is needed to ensure an accurate and timely diagnosis. Furthermore, characteristic inflammatory-related morning pain should not rule out consideration of non-inflammatory causes.
...
PMID:Limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B masquerading as inflammatory myopathy: case report. 2364 9