Rodolico_2002_Neuromuscul.Disord_12_964

Reference

Title : Limb-girdle myasthenia: clinical, electrophysiological and morphological features in familial and autoimmune cases - Rodolico_2002_Neuromuscul.Disord_12_964
Author(s) : Rodolico C , Toscano A , Autunno M , Messina S , Nicolosi C , Aguennouz M , Laura M , Girlanda P , Messina C , Vita G
Ref : Neuromuscular Disorders , 12 :964 , 2002
Abstract :

Limb-girdle myasthenia is an uncommon disease and includes familial and autoimmune forms. Patients present proximal muscle weakness and wasting, and sometimes fatigability, without cranial nerve involvement and fluctuations. We observed, during a 15-year period, nine subjects with limb-girdle myasthenia, (24-55 years; 8 males, 1 female) who constituted 3.2% of 281 myasthenic patients attending our department. All had previously received a diagnosis different from myasthenia. Diagnosis of limb-girdle myasthenia was established by clinical, muscle biopsy and electrophysiological assessment including repetitive nerve stimulation and single fiber electromyography. Five patients had the familial form with tubular aggregates in skeletal muscle; four patients had the autoimmune form. Patients with the familial form had a good response to acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, and the patients with the autoimmune form responded to immunotherapy. Our findings reinforce the opportunity to suspect limb-girdle myasthenia in unclassifiable proximal myopathies and to differentiate familial from autoimmune cases, especially for therapeutic implications.

PubMedSearch : Rodolico_2002_Neuromuscul.Disord_12_964
PubMedID: 12467753

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Citations formats

Rodolico C, Toscano A, Autunno M, Messina S, Nicolosi C, Aguennouz M, Laura M, Girlanda P, Messina C, Vita G (2002)
Limb-girdle myasthenia: clinical, electrophysiological and morphological features in familial and autoimmune cases
Neuromuscular Disorders 12 :964

Rodolico C, Toscano A, Autunno M, Messina S, Nicolosi C, Aguennouz M, Laura M, Girlanda P, Messina C, Vita G (2002)
Neuromuscular Disorders 12 :964