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QUEST Volume 10, Number 3, MAY/JUNE 2003
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AMD ALS DM IBM LEMS LGMD
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MG MMD1 MMD2 PM SMA TM |
Fred's muscle strength is normal except for a score of 4+ in his neck muscles, arm-extending muscles, hip-flexing muscles, knee-extending muscles, and toe flexors and extensors. His grip is slightly weak at 4+. Strength doesn't decrease or increase with repeated trials. (See explanation of these ratings.)
He's unable to rise from the floor or from a low chair without using his hands. He's unable to do a sit-up with his arms behind his head.
Several areas seem normal: touch and pain sensation, skin condition, twitches (fasciculations), obvious cardiac or respiratory problems.
His deep tendon reflexes are normal except at the ankles, where they're slightly decreased, at 1+.
He says he's not overly sleepy during the day, doesn't fatigue easily with exercise and doesn't believe he has any special problems with his memory or intellect. Examiner notices Fred has enlarged calves and frontal balding.
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NOT LIKELY: Peripheral nerve disease still looks unlikely, since reflexes aren't decreased.
Neuromuscular junction disorders usually worsen with repeated tests of strength, although LEMS usually improves. This patient stayed the same, nearly ruling out these disorders.
POSSIBLE: Adult-onset spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), which involves proximal weakness, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). But both usually show some fasciculations, and ALS usually shows brisk, overactive reflexes.
MOST LIKELY: A muscle disease. Good candidates are:
Creatine kinase (CK) level is normal.
Thyroid function is normal.
Blood sugar is somewhat high.
Serum antibodies often found in PM and DM are absent.
Nerve impulses are conducted at a normal speed and with normal strength.
Electrical testing of the muscles shows signs of myotonia — a lack of muscle relaxation — and degeneration of some muscle fibers.RULED OUT: The normal CK level suggests this isn't PM or DM or LGMD; lack of antibodies suggests it isn't PM or DM. TM is ruled out by the normal thyroid tests. Nerve tests rule out ALS and SMA.
LESS LIKELY: Fred's CK is low for AMD, but this disease sometimes shows myotonia.
NEW FRONT-RUNNER: The finding of myotonia — unlikely in the other
diseases being considered — tips the balance toward MMD.
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Type 1 MMD: negative
Sample taken from Fred's thigh muscle shows evidence of muscle degeneration typical of a moderately severe muscular dystrophy or acquired muscle disease. It shows no evidence of glycogen accumulation.
RULED OUT: The lack of glycogen accumulation eliminates AMD. The DNA test eliminates MMD1.
POSSIBLE: IBM is still possible, though it usually doesn't feature myotonia.
The tentative diagnosis is type 2 MMD.
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Type 2 MMD: positive
Type 2 MMD
The myotonia, cataracts, high blood sugar, calf enlargement, family history and balding can all be explained by this diagnosis.
This is a genetic disease, inherited in a dominant fashion on chromosome 3. (A flawed gene from one parent can cause the disorder.) It appears to be particularly common in people of German and Eastern European ancestry. It's likely that Fred's mother also had type 2 MMD.
Fred's 18-year-old son has a 50 percent chance of having inherited the chromosome 3 genetic mutation from his father. The young man shows no signs of the disease, and the family and physician decide to wait until he is older to discuss genetic and other testing options with him.
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