Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0231528 (myalgia)
6,565 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinical and epidemiologic analyses of PPMA in Japan based on the nation-wide case survey were reported, and differences between PPMA and ALS were discussed. The present survey covering the years from 1984 through 1991 cited 42 PPMA cases (30 male:12 female). The absolute incidence of PPMA is estimated 0.12/10(5) of the Japanese population (about 150 cases in total), which indicates 0.5% of the polio survivors. In Japan an actual increase of patients is noticed in these 10 years, which reflects the big epidemic of polio around 1950-60. The antecedent poliomyelitis occurred at the mean age of 2.6, mostly between 1940 and 1960. Residual paralysis was generally absent or only minimal. Late muscular atrophy and weakness were noticed at age from 16 to 63 y (mean:41.5), with the mean latency of 40.1 years after polio. Both polio-affected and unaffected site of the limb were equally involved by PPMA, but the left leg tends to be predominantly involved. Neurological symptoms were summarized as an asymmetrical proximal muscular atrophy and flaccid motor paresis in one or two limbs with decreased tendon reflexes. Fasciculation in 45.2%, myalgia in 28.6%, and hypesthesia in 28.5% were noticed. Electromyography and muscle CT scan showed marked selective neurogenic changes. In most cases symptoms are stable or slowly progressive, with some recovery by rest or rehabilitation and deterioration by over work and/or trauma. On regarding these clinical features, PPMA is essentially different from classical ALS. Long-term hyperfunction of survived neurons with potential fragility by polio infection is suspected to mediate PPMA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Post-poliomyelitis late progressive muscular atrophy (PPMA)--clinical analyses of Japanese cases]. 181 99

Many of the hundreds of thousands of survivors of polio are now developing postpolio syndrome. Symptoms include progressive muscle weakness, fatigue, decreased endurance, joint and muscle pain, weight gain, respiratory difficulties, and sleep disturbance, often precipitated or exacerbated by a Type-A Personality pattern. A postpolio patient with Type-A Personality was taught self-hypnosis as a vital component of treatment. Pre-post testing included the Profile of Mood States, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the State-Trait Anger Inventory, and the Personal Orientation Inventory; the patient's spouse was interviewed during the follow-up. At the 6-month follow-up, improvements were documented in pain level, depression, self-regard, self-acceptance, capacity for intimate contact, time competence (living in the present), confusion, anxiety, insomnia, and in trait and state anger. Only a mild improvement occurred in fatigue, and no improvement was found in weight control. Follow-up at 12 months confirmed the maintenance of improvements. Self-hypnosis training may prove extremely helpful for postpolio patients and may prove helpful in modifying central characteristics of Type-A Personality.
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PMID:Hypnosis for postpolio syndrome & Type-A behavior. 195 Nov 42

Eighteen patients with old poliomyelitis were assessed in order to determine the incidence and severity of late complications. Sixty-one percent complained of new weakness, 83% fatigue and 17% muscle pain. After assessment 33% (six patients) were judged to have significant new weakness and muscle fatigue that could not be explained by other causes, and this group may have postpoliomyelitis progressive muscular atrophy or postpolio syndrome. Onset of symptoms was typically about 30 years after the acute illness; new weakness was relatively mild and progression was slow over many years. Clinically and pathologically this disorder is distinct from idiopathic motor neuron disease, and is not life threatening.
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PMID:Neuromuscular symptoms in patients with previous poliomyelitis: a New Zealand study. 252 9

Patients with late effects of poliomyelitis, i.e., PPS, are being seen at an ever increasing frequency by general physicians, neurologists, and orthopedists. An appropriate time interval for the onset of late manifestations has elapsed since the major epidemics of poliomyelitis in the 1940s and 1950s. Post-polio neurological manifestations primarily include new weakness, atrophy, muscle pain, and fasciculations. Fortunately, the weakness is of a very slow, progressive nature. Abnormal laboratory studies include routine EMG, demonstrating chronic denervation; SFEMG, demonstrating increased fiber density, increased jitter, and blocking; and muscle biopsy most often revealing fiber-type grouping of chronic denervation and small isolated angular (or angulated) fibers and group atrophy in some series, both suggestive of active denervation. Unfortunately, both EMG and muscle biopsy studies suffer from a lack of specificity as they do not appear to distinguish asymptomatic from symptomatic (new weakness, PPMA) patients with prior poliomyelitis. Although the cause of PPMA is unknown, electrophysiological (SFEMG) and muscle biopsy studies suggest that the process involves a loss or dropout of axon terminals of reinnervated motor units. The axons terminal dropout could be due to dysfunction in the cell soma, the axon, or the terminals themselves. Whether motor neuron exhaustion, a persistent viral infection, or immune-mediated mechanisms play a role in the pathogenesis of the late weakness is unclear at present and will require further investigation. Treatment at this time is of a supportive nature. A major controversy involves the role of strengthening exercises in these patients since experimental animal studies suggest that excessive exercise of denervated muscles leads to increased weakness. Clearly, a better understanding of PPS and PPMA will allow more effective management of these patients' problems and might also provide insight into other motor neuron and neuromuscular junction diseases.
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PMID:Neurological manifestations of the post-polio syndrome. 331 37

The PPS is now a well-recognized entity encompassing the late manifestations that occur because of previous poliomyelitis. Common signs and symptoms include fatigue, cold intolerance, joint deteriorations with pain, and prominent neurologic problems that include new weakness, muscle pain, atrophy, respiratory insufficiency, dysphagia, and sleep apnea. It is estimated that there are 1.63 million polio survivors in the United States and that half of them will develop PPS. PPS and PPMA usually begin 30 to 40 years after the acute illness and are very slowly progressive. The etiology is unclear, although premature exhaustion of the new sprouts that develop after acute poliomyelitis and of their motor neurons appears most likely. Less likely is a persistent polio-virus infection or an immune-mediated problem. Treatment is primarily supportive, although nonfatiguing strengthening exercise may improve strength over the short term. The long-term effects of this type of exercise remain to be clarified.
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PMID:Post-polio syndrome: an update. 827

Over a four-year period, all in-patients at our department with the diagnosis of polio-sequelae were clinically examined for development of new neuromuscular deficit. 19 out of 125 patients (15%) had developed a postpolio syndrome. All 19 had acquired additional functional deficit and 17 new, localized pareses. Five patients had developed polio-related hypoventilation. The mean time from acute poliomyelitis to debut of the post-polio syndrome was 39 years. The post-polio syndrome occurred in patients with severe pareses in the acute stage, but was not related to age, sex or specific epidemic. Most of the 106 other patients had similar subjective complaints but did not have any clinical signs indicating new neuromuscular deficit. 67 of these patients had tendinitis and/or myalgia and 83 had chronic pain. Whereas many patients have progressive symptoms many years after poliomyelitis, only a minority develop the post-polio syndrome.
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PMID:[The post-poliomyelitis syndrome--a real complication. A poliomyelitis material from the Haukeland hospital]. 914 48

Postpolio syndrome (PPS) refers to a group of conditions that are present in patients, years after recovery from initial acute paralytic poliomyelitis. About 15%-80% of 20 million polio survivors worldwide will experience exacerbation of symptoms which typically appear 15-30 years after the resolution of initial poliomyelitis. Symptoms include new muscle weakness, fatigue, myalgia, joint pain, dysphagia, and difficulty breathing. Other reported symptoms include cold intolerance, sleep disorder, dysphonia, loss of stamina, musculoskeletal deformities, cardiovascular disorders, psychosocial problems, and restless legs syndrome. These symptoms are attributed to the superimposed neuronal loss of aging with inflammatory mechanisms, but without any convincing evidence of viral reactivation. Risk factors include female gender, respiratory symptoms, normal aging, permanent disability caused by motor neuron damage, muscle overuse and disuse, aging, and immunologic mechanisms. Hypothyroidism-induced myopathy and fibromyalgia are a differential diagnosis for PPS, and exclusion diagnosis is required as confirmatory criteria for PPS. The symptoms of PPS presented determine the course of management.
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PMID:Postpolio Syndrome: A Review of Lived Experiences of Patients. 3139 74