Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) Flashcards

1
Q

Amyotrhopic lateral sclerosis name meaning

A

amyotrophic (atrophys of fiber)
Lateral (lateral column of spinal cord)
sclerosis (inflm causing damage, hardening)

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2
Q

ALS is a __________ neuron disorder

A

Motor neuron disorder, (AFFECTS MOTOR NEURONS ONLY)

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3
Q

ALS higher incidence

A

in middle aged males (2x), therefore we can create expectation autoimmunity not involved

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4
Q

ALS is

A

acute, progressive, death in 2-5yrs

-respiratory complications most frequent cause of death

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5
Q

what is most frequent cause of death in ALS

A

-respiratory complications

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6
Q

in ALS there is issues

A

with innervation to muscle, which causes motor function problems

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7
Q

when word ends in ase

A

it is an enzyme

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8
Q

Etiology of ALS

A

Sporadic (90-95%):
-SOD1 gene on chr 21 (aprox 5%)

Familial (5-10%):

  • SOD1 (20%)
  • other genes (80%) complex trait (polygenic & enviromental)

other components as well (viral trigger, autoimmune?)

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9
Q

SOD1 gene

A

superoxide dismutase 1 gene:
gene makes enzyme that breaks down free radicals)
if gene intact enzyme will work, if mutated accumulation of free radicals

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10
Q

Patho of ALS

A

-degeneration of motor neurons especially in:
anterior horn cells of spinal cord
motor nuclei in brain stem
upper motor neurons in cerebral cortex (connect brain to spinal cord)

-mechanism unclear: proposed to be via free radicals &/or glutamate toxicity (unclear why free radicals specifically targeting motor neurons)

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11
Q

what do the upper motor neurons in cerebral cortex do

A

connect brain to spinal cord

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12
Q

glutamate

A

neurotransmitter in excess can cause neurotoxicity

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13
Q

manifestations of ALS

A
  • muscle atrophy, weaknesss, fasciculations (muscle twitches)
  • dysarthria (impaired speech, need to utilize muscles to speak, muscles associated w speech atrophy, problems)
  • acute com
  • intact cognition & sensory function
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14
Q

what are fasciculations

A

muscle twitches

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15
Q

what is dysarthria, what is dysphagia

A

dysarthria: impaired speech, need to utilize muscles to speak, muscles associated w speech atrophy, problems with speech)
dysphagia: cannot swallow d/t muscle atrophy causing aspiration (not able to cough because muscles atrophied)

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16
Q

what are some acute complications form ALS

A

dysphagia & aspiration

17
Q

what is intact with ALS

A

intact cognition & sensory function

18
Q

Diagnosing ALS

A
  • history, clinical presentation & physical exam

- electromyography

19
Q

what is electromyography

A

detects abnormal muscle & neuron functions

can look at muscle function & neuron function or both, from electrical stimulus

20
Q

treatment of ALS

A

-largely supportive (ex. Ensure flu shot, pneumnococcal vaccines, issues wiht ingestion of food d/t dysphagia< PEG tube- nutrition goes through stomach via abdominal wall)
-supportive care can turn into palliative care
-riluzole (antiglutamate neuro protection):
somehow prevents glutamate toxicity, does not know action, limited success