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Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term
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Page 1: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Muscle weakness

Index case Year 1

Michaelmas Term

Page 2: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

The case:• 27 year old woman• 4 month history of increasing weakness in

arms• Gets worse with repetitive tasks such as

chopping food• Noticed her speech becoming strange• Difficulty swallowing and chewing food• Double vision- can no longer read a

newspaper• Boyfriend says her eyes look droopy

Page 3: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.
Page 4: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Some medical words:

• Difficulty speaking?

• Difficulty swallowing?

• Droopy eyelids?

• Double vision?

Page 5: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Some medical words:

• Difficulty speaking? dysarthria

• Difficulty swallowing? dysphagia

• Droopy eyelids? ptosis

• Double vision? diplopia

Page 6: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

A differential diagnosis?

Page 7: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

A differential diagnosis?

• nerves? (e.g multiple sclerosis)

• muscles? (e.g polymyositis)

• neuromuscular junction?

-autoimmune: myasthenia gravis

-infectious: e.g botulism

- neoplastic: e.g Lambert Eaton syndrome

-toxic: e.g organophosphate poisoning; snake bite

Page 8: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

What is myasthenia gravis?

Page 9: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

myasthenia gravis• Autoimmune condition. IgG antibodies

deposited at post synaptic membrane receptors

• causes interference and later destruction of acetylcholine receptors

• Incidence: 5:100,000 women >men• 10% cases in children• Thymoma in 10% cases

Page 10: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.
Page 11: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

How is Ach released at the NMJ?

Page 12: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

The neuromuscular junction:

• Depolarisation of nerve ending

• Influx of ca++ ions• Vesicles of Ach

released into neuro-synaptic junction

• Diffusion to receptors on motor endplate

Page 13: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

The neuromuscular junction:

• Ach on receptor causes influx of sodium ions

• Initiates action potential in muscle cell

• Ach destroyed by acetylcholineesterase into acetic acid and choline

• Choline taken up by nerve ending

Page 14: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Why do the patient’s symptoms get worse with repetitive

movement?

Page 15: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Why do the patient’s symptoms get worse with repetitive

movement?

• Increased use of Ach receptors exhausts the system with reduced numbers of active receptors. Small muscles (in eyes, face, throat) and proximal limb muscles affected first

Page 16: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

How might you confirm the diagnosis?

• Clinical picture

• IgG antibodies 90%

• Tensilon (edrophonium test): an anticholinesterase is injected IV with a rapid improvement for 2-3 minutes

• CT or MRI scan for thymoma

Page 17: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

How might you treat myasthenia?

• Oral anticholinesterases neostigmine and pyridostigmine

• Autoimmune suppression with steroids or azathioprine

• Thymectomy, especially in young patients with high levels of antibodies

Page 18: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Other causes of N-M-J dysfunction?

Page 19: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Other causes of N-M-J dysfunction?

• “Botox” and botulism: toxin from clostridium botulinum prevents release of Ach at presynaptic junction- causes paralysis

Page 20: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.
Page 21: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Lambert-Eaton syndrome

• Presynaptic impaired release of Ach

• 60% cases associated with small cell carcinoma of lung

• Presents like myasthenia gravis

Page 22: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

snakebite

Page 23: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Snake venom: neurotoxin

• Beta- neurotoxin blocks presynaptic membrane (Ach release)

• Alpha neurotoxin blocks post-synaptic membrane

• Both cause paralysis

Page 24: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Any other situations a doctor might need to know about N-M-Js?

Page 25: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.

Any other situations a doctor might need to know about N-M-Js?

• Neuromuscular blockers in anaesthesia

• Either competitive drugs e.g. pancuronium which block receptor

• Or depolarising blockers, which act on the Ach receptor to trigger ion channels but are not reversed by Achesterase e.g. suxamethonium

Page 26: Muscle weakness Index case Year 1 Michaelmas Term.