Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (myositis)
4,538 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-two chronic alcoholic patients were assessed by neurologic examination and muscle biopsy. The patients manifested proximal muscular weakness to a variable extent. One case presented as an acute bout of myopathy, according to the Manual Muscle Test, MMT. The most prominent histologic feature observed was muscle atrophy (95.3%) better evidenced through the ATPase stain with the predominance of type II A fibers (71.4%). Lack of the mosaic pattern (type grouping) seen in 76% of the cases and an important mitochondrial proliferation with intrasarcoplasmatic lipid accumulation in 63% of the patients. In case of acute presentation of muscle weakness the pathological substrate is quite different, i.e. presence of myositis mainly interstitial characterized by lymphoplasmocytic infiltrate and several spots of necrosis like Zencker degeneration. Based on histologic criteria, our data suggest that: the main determinant of muscle weakness seen in chronic alcoholic patients is neurogenic in origin (alcoholic polyneuropathy); the direct toxic action of ethanol under the skeletal muscle is closely related to the mitochondrial metabolism; the so-called acute alcoholic myopathy has probably viral etiology.
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PMID:[Histochemical study of the skeletal muscle in chronic alcoholism]. 248 Jul 68

A 54 year old waiter was referred to the hospital because of proximal muscle weakness, most pronounced in his legs, which progressed to an inability to stand or walk within weeks. Myopathy was diagnosed based on the muscle biopsy findings and myositis was ruled out by laboratory and biopsy results. Further investigations led us to exclude an endocrine cause, hypovitaminosis D, infectious myopathy or a paraneoplastic syndrome. Heteroanamnesis revealed severe alcoholism, lasting for more than 30 years. The presumed alcohol induced hepatopathy was confirmed by liver biopsy. There were no signs of an acute alcoholic myopathy, as the weakness had developed rather insidiously, there was no elevation of the CK serum level nor myoglobinuria and a type 2 fibre atrophy was found by muscle biopsy. As expected the weakness improved under abstention. Thus the final diagnosis of a chronic alcohol induced myopathy was established.
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PMID:[Immobilizing muscle weakness accentuated in leg and proximal muscles]. 962 35