Muscle and Nerve Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Muscle and nerve diseases can result from disorders in which parts of the pathway?

A

Muscle itself
NMJ
Peripheral nerve
Anterior horn cell

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2
Q

What are the signs/symptoms of a muscle disease?

A
Weakness of muscle
Shortness of breath (resp muscles)
Poor swallow
Cardiomyopathy
Cramp, pain, myoglobinuria
Poor suck, feeding, failure to thrive, floppy
Wasting/hypertrophy
Normal/reduced tone and reflexes
Motor weakness - not sensory
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3
Q

What investigations might be done in suspected muscle disease?

A

Creatinine Kinase
Electromyography
Muscle biopsy - structure, biochemistry, inflammation
Genetic testing

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4
Q

What are the different types of muscle disease?

A
Muscular dystrophy
Channelopathies
Metabolic muscle disease
Inflammatory muscle disease
Congenital myopathies
Iatrogenic
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5
Q

How might NMJ disorders present? What is an example of one?

A

Fatiguable weakness

  • limbs
  • eyelids
  • muscles of mastication
  • talking
  • SOB
  • diplopia

E.g. myasthenia gravis

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6
Q

What investigations might be done in suspected NMJ disorder?

A

AChR Ab
Anti Muscle-specific kinase AB
Neurophysiology - repetitive nerve stimulation and single-fibre EMG
CT chest - thymoma

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7
Q

How are NMJ disorders treated?

A

Symptomatic e.g. AChEIs
Immunosuppressants - prednisolone, steroid saving agent (azatioprine)
Ig/Plasma exchange
Thymectomy

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8
Q

What are the types of peripheral nerve disorders?

A

Root disease

  • degenerative spine disease
  • inflammation
  • infiltration

Lesion of individual peripheral nerve

  • compressive/entrapment
  • vasculitic

Generalised peripheral neuropathy

  • motor/sensory/both
  • +/- autonomic features
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9
Q

What are some causes of peripheral nerve disorders?

A
Metabolic - diabetes, alcohol, renal, B12
Toxic - drugs
Hereditary
Infectious - Lyme, HIV, leprosy
Malignancy
Inflammatory demyelinating
- acute = Guillain Barre syndrome
- chronic = chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy
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10
Q

What are the symptoms/signs of a peripheral nerve disorder?

A

If nerve root

  • myotomal wasting/weakness
  • reflex change
  • dermatomal sensory change

Individual nerve

  • wasting and weakness of specific muscle
  • specific sensory change

Generalised peripheral neuropathy
- sensory and motor symptoms starting distally and moving proximally

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11
Q

What investigations might be done in suspected peripheral nerve disorders?

A
Blood tests
Genetic analysis
Nerve conduction studies
LP - CSF analysis
Nerve biopsy
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12
Q

What are the clinical features of Guillain-Barre syndrome?

A

Weakness of distal limb muscles and/or distal numbness
Low back pain frequent early feature
Proximal progression of neuropathy
Loss of tendon reflexes

Give IV Ig

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13
Q

Clinical features of lower vs upper motor neuron lesion?

A

LMN

  • muscle fasciculations
  • wasting
  • weakness

UMN

  • increased tone
  • brisk reflexes
  • no sensory involvement
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14
Q

What are the definitions of myelopathy and radiculopathy?

A

Radiculopathy is the term used to describe pinching of the nerve roots as they exit the spinal cord or cross the intervertebral disc, rather than the compression of the cord itself (myelopathy)

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15
Q

How might motor neuron disease present?

A

Usually limb onset, later bulbar and respiratory involvement
Combination of LMN and UMN signs

50% die within 14 months of diagnosis

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16
Q

How is motor neuron disease diagnosed?

A

EMG + unique combination of UMN and LMN signs

17
Q

How is motor neuron disease managed?

A

Supportive

  • PEG
  • NIV
  • physio
  • OT, care

Riluzole