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Query: UMLS:C0231528 (
myalgia
)
6,565
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We present 12 cases of males with
myalgia
and cramps and a normal muscle strength examination. All the patients had muscle
dystrophin
values consistent with Becker muscular dystrophy. Five of the patients had a normal electromyogram, and five had normal light microscopic muscle biopsy results. Of particular note, four of the 12 patients had normal serum creatine kinase levels, and four others had only mild elevations (less than twice the upper limit of normal). These patients establish an identifiable dystrophinopathy of adolescent boys and young men that can present with
muscle pain
and, in some cases, normal routine laboratory evaluations.
...
PMID:Myalgia and cramps: dystrophinopathy with wide-ranging laboratory findings. 874 80
One hundred twenty five patients from 105 families were considered, showing in-frame intragenic deletion or duplication of the dystrophin gene and/or abnormal
dystrophin
on muscle biopsy. According to clinical status of patients, the affection was classified as subclinical, benign, moderate or severe. Significant decrease of
dystrophin
abundance was observed with increasing clinical severity (p < 0.05). Detailed clinical data were available in 68 patients in whom a long-term follow-up (6-39 years) was obtained. Functional performance at different ages and disease endpoints were recorded in order to analyze the rate of disease progression. We identified three different disease courses: stable, slow and rapid progression. We observed a significantly lower level of
dystrophin
and immunohistochemical score (p < 0.05 vs. the other courses) in patients with rapid course. Deletion or duplication in the 5' end of the gene was associated with poor prognosis. Prognosis was substantially better, showing a stable course, in patients with large deletions or duplications in the proximal rod region. These subjects often suffered from a cramps/
myalgia
syndrome or experienced rhabdomyolisis. Cardiac involvement was detected in 65% of cases. A significant increase of right ventricular volume was seen in all clinical groups (p < 0.05). A left ventricular dilation was observed in 25% and a decreased ejection fraction in 29% of our patients. The reduction of ejection fraction and the increase of left ventricular volume were age-related. Since sudden death may occur as a consequence of cardiomyopathy, severe left ventricular dysfunction in dystrophinopathic patients is another important adverse prognostic factor, although not always directly correlated with skeletal muscle impairment.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in mild dystrophinopathies. 890 23
We report a family with an X-linked recessive muscular dystrophy characterised by exercise-induced
myalgia
, recurrent pigmenturia and mild proximal muscle involvement. Immunocytochemical and immunoblotting analysis in muscle, using the antibody directed against the rod domain of
dystrophin
, revealed a loss of immunoreactivity, but the immunolabelling using the antibodies directed against the COOH and NH2 domains of
dystrophin
were almost normal. The immunoreactions for alpha-sarcoglycan, gamma-sarcoglycan and beta-dystroglycan were normal. In the five male patients of this family with increased serum creatine kinase levels (from x8 to x50), mass spectrometry screening of the urine revealed a large increase in glycerol elimination which was quantified by enzymatic assay (from x14 to x39). An in-frame deletion of the dystrophin gene (exons 13-29) was found in the same five males and in three carrier females. All the deleted chromosomes also carried a missense mutation at nucleotide 947 of the Xp glycerol kinase (GK) gene resulting in a Thr to Met substitution at codon 278. These findings indicate that the two mutations cosegregate on the same chromosome in this family. This is the first reported case of two physically independent mutations, within the DMD and GK genes, which are contiguous but several hundred kilobases apart.
...
PMID:A point mutation in the glycerol kinase gene associated with a deletion in the dystrophin gene in a familial X-linked muscular dystrophy: non-contiguous gene syndrome involving Becker muscular dystrophy and glycerol kinase loci. 944 7
The patient was a 50-year-old house wife. There were complicated consanguineous marriages in the family tree. Since 30 years of age, she had suffered from progressive limb muscle weakness, but without
myalgia
and myasthenia. At present, she was wheelchair-bound. Physical examinations showed obesity, congenital livedo racemosa, epicanthus palpebrae and left renal defect. Neurologically, facial, anterior cervical, and iliopsoas muscles were well preserved, but others were severely involved. Laboratory examinations revealed mildly elevated myogenic serum enzymes, and myogenic changes on needle EMG. In her muscle biopsy from the left rectus femoris muscle, there were no inflammatory changes, but marked variations of the fiber size as well as adipose tissue replacement were recognized. Strickingly, basophilic masses located in the center of the sarcoplasm were present in about 10% of the fibers. Histochemically, the masses were present in both type 1 and 2 fibers, and exhibited almost similar stained patterns to the tubular aggregates, but were
dystrophin
-, GRP78- and clathrin-positive. Under electron microscopy, the masses consisted of aggregates of the vesiculotubular structure, measuring approximately from 60 nm to more than 6 microns in diameter, which were continuous with T system/sarcoplasmic reticulum and were clearly segregated from myofilaments. This is a chronic progressive muscular disorder of adult onset with the peculiar pathological finding of vesiculotubular structure.
...
PMID:[Clinico-pathological analysis of vesiculotubular myopathy of adult onset]. 1020 72
Limb girdle muscular dystrophy is a group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorders inherited in an autosomal recessive or dominant mode. Caveolin-3, the muscle-specific member of the caveolin gene family, is implicated in the pathogenesis of autosomal dominant limb girdle muscular dystrophy 1C. Here we report on a 4-year-old girl presenting with
myalgia
and muscle cramps due to a caveolin-3 deficiency in her dystrophic skeletal muscle as a result of a heterozygous 136G-->A substitution in the caveolin-3 gene. The novel sporadic missense mutation in the caveolin signature sequence of the caveolin-3 gene changes an alanine to a threonine (A46T) and prevents the localization of caveolin-3 to the plasma membrane in a dominant negative fashion. Caveolin-3 has been suggested to interact with the
dystrophin
-glycoprotein complex, which in striated muscle fibers links the cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix and with neuronal nitric oxide synthase. Similar to
dystrophin
-deficient Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a secondary decrease in neuronal nitric oxide synthase and alpha-dystroglycan expression was detected in the caveolin-3-deficient patient. These results implicate an important function of the caveolin signature sequence and common mechanisms in the pathogenesis of
dystrophin
-glycoprotein complex-associated muscular dystrophies with caveolin-3-deficient limb girdle muscular dystrophy.
...
PMID:Dissociation of the dystroglycan complex in caveolin-3-deficient limb girdle muscular dystrophy. 1100 38
Cramps and myalgias are frequent presentations of many disorders whose diagnosis is generally difficult. Among the unusual causes stand the milder phenotypes of dystrophinopathies, which are caused, just as Duchenne and Becker's dystrophy, by mutations in the dystrophin gene. An 8 year-old boy presented severe
muscle pain
on exercise and serum rise in creatine kinase over 1000 U/l. He had normal muscle power and mild calf hypertrophy. The molecular analysis by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of the dystrophin gene showed deletions of exons 45 to 51. Dystrophin analysis by Western blot revealed a
dystrophin
of reduced quantity and molecular weight. Emphasis is made to include dystrophinopathies in the differential diagnosis of myalgias and the usefulness of molecular genetic techniques in the identification of these disorders.
...
PMID:[Post exercise myalgias as presentation form of dystrophinopathy]. 1105 Aug 39
To clarify the role of tissue eosinophils in and around inflammatory foci, we purified eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) and examined its effect on muscle protein degradation in vitro. Eosinophil cationic protein was purified from the buffy coat of blood from healthy volunteers. Myofibrillar, soluble sarcoplasmic, and membrane-associated cytoskeletal proteins were fractionated from latissimus dorsi muscle obtained by orthopedic procedures done on a patient with no neurologic abnormalities. After incubation of these fractions with purified ECP, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and immunoblotting were performed. Eosinophil cationic protein degraded the myofibrillar proteins, especially the myosin heavy chain (MHC) and alpha-actinin. It also degraded membrane-associated cytoskeletal proteins
dystrophin
and spectrin, whereas soluble sarcoplasmic proteins did not undergo proteolysis. Quantitative analysis of the MHC degradation showed that the ECP reaction was dose-dependent and that the optimal pH was 7.0. Protein degradation was not inhibited by heparin or the protease inhibitors leupeptin, E-64, and pepstatin A. Our results suggest that ECP functions in the degradation of myofibrillar and membrane-associated cytoskeletal proteins, indicating that tissue eosinophils have a specific role in muscle fiber degradation in some myopathies associated with numerous tissue eosinophils, such as eosinophilic myositis, eosinophilic
myalgia
syndrome, and eosinophilic endocardial disease.
...
PMID:Human muscle protein degradation in vitro by eosinophil cationic protein (ECP). 1174 72
Colchicine, a microtubule polymerization inhibitor, can very occasionally induce myopathy. We report two cases of colchicine myopathy. Both patients presented with
myalgia
and proximal muscle weakness. The first patient, an 80-year-old woman, had chronic renal failure related to renal amyloidosis. She had been treated by colchicine for 4 months. The second, a 75-year-old man with normal renal function, suffering from gout, was treated by colchicine for 3 weeks. Muscle biopsies displayed the same alterations, but the degree of severity was different. Conventional histology revealed vacuolar changes characterized by acid phosphatase-positive vacuoles and myofibrillar disarray foci. The lesions were selective for type I fibers. Ultrastructural study demonstrated autophagic vacuoles. Most of the vacuoles expressed
dystrophin
but not merosin. Several fibers reacted with anti-MHC class I antibody and granular deposits of membrane attack complex were observed on the surface of numerous myofibers. Anti-alphaB-crystallin antibody strongly reacted with vacuolar content. Physiopathologically, microtubules are primordial for vesicle movements and colchicine induces autophagic vacuole accumulation by preventing their fusion with lysosomes. The selective type I involvement is probably due to the higher tubulin amount in type I fibers. AlphaB-crystallin overexpression is related to its microtubule protection properties. Moreover, we suggest that vacuoles randomly floating in sarcoplasm might occasionally meet the plasma membrane and open in the extracellular space, leading to complement activation. Accurate diagnosis of colchicine myopathy is relevant because the treatment is based on colchicine interruption.
...
PMID:Colchicine myopathy: a vacuolar myopathy with selective type I muscle fiber involvement. An immunohistochemical and electron microscopic study of two cases. 1181 Jan 74
Muscular dystrophy was diagnosed in seven male Japanese Spitz dogs with clinical signs of slowly progressive exercise intolerance, generalized weakness,
myalgia
, difficulty chewing and dysphagia. Serum creatine kinase (CK) concentrations were markedly elevated. Histopathology showed degeneration and regeneration of muscle, consistent with a dystrophic phenotype. Immunohistochemical staining for
dystrophin
and related proteins showed no staining with a monoclonal antibody against the rod domain of
dystrophin
but near-normal staining with an antibody against the C terminus. Immunoblot analysis in two affected dogs showed a truncated
dystrophin
protein of approximately 70-80 kDa. The severity of disease showed that this fragment was not large enough to protect from the dystrophic process.
...
PMID:Muscular dystrophy with truncated dystrophin in a family of Japanese Spitz dogs. 1470 16
A Spanish family is reported with dystrophinopathy of
myalgia
and cramps syndrome type. There were five affected males and three females, and also six asymptomatic carriers. Muscle biopsy showed a dystrophic pattern, but immunohistochemistry carried out with three anti-
dystrophin
antibodies was normal. Dystrophin analysis by western blot revealed a
dystrophin
of reduced quantity and molecular weight. DNA analysis showed a deletion of the dystrophin gene involving exons 45-52. The natural history of this disorder and the large intrafamilial clinical variability are discussed.
...
PMID:Spanish family with myalgia and cramps syndrome. 1565 55
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