NMJ and Muscle Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

mechanism of myasthenia gravis

A

AB against muscle type nAChR

so less receptors for ACh binding –> decr depol and decr muscle contraction

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2
Q

2 clinical forms of myasthenia gravis

A

1) ocular = weakness limited to eyelids and extraocular muscles
2) generalized = weakness (also affects ocular) but also bulbar, limb, and resp muscles

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3
Q

hallmark of myasthenia gravis

A

acute onset of fluctuating weakness

fatigability
progressively weaker during activity and improve after rest

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4
Q

physical exam of myasthenia gravis

A

can be normal

weakness often asymmetric

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5
Q

progression of disease and signs and symptoms

A

2/3 start with diplopia (double vision or ptosis (droop eyelid)

also

1) facial weakness, dysphagia
2) slurred speech
3) shortness of breath –> resp arrest
4) neck muscle weakness
5) prox arm/leg weak –> quadriplegia
6) ophthalmoparesis (paralysis of EOM)

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6
Q

immunopath of myasthenia gravis

effects of diff antibodies

A

autoantibodies against

1) muscle type nAChR
2) impair ability of ACh to bind R
3) destruction of receptor from complement fixation or induce muscle cell to elim recepotrs via endocytosis

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7
Q

mechanism of antibody production

A

1) B cells make plasma cells via T helper stim

2) T helpers first activated via binding of TCR to AChR epitope

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8
Q

what do myasthenia gravis patients often have assoc (another organ problem)

A

thymoma due to involvement of T cell production and TCR

thymectomy in MG effective

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9
Q

drugs used in MG

1) edrophonium

A

super fast onset and short acting
used to dx MG

should be marked improvement in muscle tone (Tensilon test)

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10
Q

drugs used in MG

2) prednisone

A

immunosuppression but often make patients worse via NMJ block before better

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11
Q

drugs used in MG

3) azathioprine

A

GOLD STANDARD
antimetabolite that blocks cell prolif to inhib T lymphocytes

decr AChR antiboides

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12
Q

side effects of azathioprine

A

1) fever, anorexia, nausea, vomit, abd pain (like flu)

2) takes 3 mo to 1 yr for response

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13
Q

drugs used for MG crisis

A

plasmapharesis

IVIG

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14
Q

define Duchenne/Becker

A

disorder of proximal muscle weakness

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15
Q

Duchenne’s

1) age of onset
2) early signs
3) late signs

A

1) 2-4 y/o
2) lordosis, pseudohypertrophy, Gower’s, awk gait

3) toe walk, tripping, slow run, waddle, mental retard (70%), big tongue
progressive scoliosis & contractures

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16
Q

Becker’s

1) age of onset
2) sx

A

1) 8 y/o

2) same as Duchenne but less severe

17
Q

specific genetic defect in DMD

A

mutation in dystrophin gene (longest gene in body; found on X chromosome)

either point mutation –> premature stop –> non functional, truncated

but becke’rs = low MW dystrophin so decr fxn (not as severe)

18
Q

function of Dystrophin

A

connect cytoskeleton of muscle fiber to surrounding ECM via cell membrane

19
Q

pathologic changes of muscle in DMD and Becker’s

A

DMD = fibrosis, degeneration, opaque fibers

on EM = delta lesion (disruption in plasma membrane) –> hole for calcium to leak in –> activ Ca2+ activ neutral protease –> necrosis of myofiber