Myasthenia Gravis Flashcards

1
Q

Myasthenia Gravis: Definition, general presentation

A

Progressive muscular weakness and fatigue with repetitive activity (if under control, progression is very slow)
Pt becomes progressively weakened with more and more repititions

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2
Q

Pathology

A

Autoimmune disoder of the neuromuscular junction

Body attacks the Ach receptors on muscles- antibodies attach to receptors and prevent Ach from binding

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3
Q

4 Characteristics of MG

A
  1. Cranial muscles affected as well as limb muscles (myopathic weakness, prox > distal)
  2. Severity of weakness varies within the day, from day to day, or over longer periods (remission and relaxation)
  3. EMG: no evidence of denervation or loss of motor units, no DTR’s or atrophy
  4. reversal of weakness via acetylcholinesterase inhibitors
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4
Q

Epidemiology: peaks of incidence

A
  1. women in teens and 20s

2. Men in 70s and 80s

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5
Q

Epidemiology: Thymoma

A

15% of pts with tumor in the thymus

may trigger or maintian production of antibodies that cause the weakness

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6
Q

Risk Factors of MG

A
  1. hyperactivity or persistent activity of thymus gland (tumor)
  2. pt or family hx of autoimmune disorder (hashimotos, MS, lupus, RA, GBS)
  3. Specific human leukocyte antigen genotypes
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7
Q

Types of MG

A
  1. Acquired autoimmune form: more in women (teens and 20s)

2. nonimmune heritable congenital MG: more in children

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8
Q

Eaton-Lambert Syndrome

A

presents like MG, but is a paraneoplastic syndrome (secondary to CA)
When they tag for the MG antibody, will not be present

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9
Q

Classic Eval Test

A

Repeated EMG stimulation of Levator Palpabrae- results in weaker/no contraction –> eye droop (ptosis)
Administration of Achesterase inhibitor - repeated EMG –> ptosis does not occur

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10
Q

Medication for MG (first line of treatment)

A
  1. Anticholinesterases –> FIRST LINE
  2. Manipulation of immune system
  3. Thymectomy (sternal precautions)
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11
Q

Anticholinesterases

A
  1. Mestinon
  2. Phystigmine
  3. Edrophonium
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12
Q

Methods of Manipulation for the immune system

A
  1. Plasmaphoresis (acute crisis)
  2. steroids
  3. thymectomy (best outcome in young: 20-30)
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13
Q

Clinical Stages of MG: Stage 1

A

“Ocular Myasthenia”

these pts won’t be coming into the hospital, likely will not see them

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14
Q

Clinical Stages of MG: Stage 2a

A

“mild generalized myasthenia”
good drug response
can return to all activities

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15
Q

Clinical Stages of MG: Stage 2b

A

“moderate generalized myasthenia”

drug response is less than satisfactory

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16
Q

Clinical Stages of MG: Stage 3

A

“Acute fulminating myastenia with respiratory crisis”
poor drug response
Acute crisis- involves respiratory system; brought to ER
medications no longer working
Goal: get out of acute crisis and return to stage 2b (possible 2a)

17
Q

Clinical Stages of MG: Stage 4

A

“late severe myasthenia”

same as 3, but you had to have had the disease for at least 2 yrs –> never really leave crisis stage

18
Q

Problem List (how you should address it in PT)

A
  1. Respiratory function (MUST evaluate; incentive spirometry, PFTs)
  2. Vision secondary to ptosis (use steri-strips to keep eye open in therapy)
  3. Fatigue (scares them! may not trust you)
  4. Endurance (use intermittent, small bursts- repitition is an issue)
  5. Proximal > Distal Weakness
19
Q

Monitoring a pt with MG (outcome measures, guarding)

A

Use a clear outcome measure based on repititions that can be performed before poor form appears (STS, incentive spirometry)
If you notice a decline in function, the pt may be entering into acute crisis phase

Guarding: ALWAYS right next to them- no indication they may buckle