Muscle channelopathies Flashcards

1
Q

What is the autosomal dominant inheritance for myotonia congenita

A

Thompsen’s

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2
Q

What is the autosomal recessive inheritance for myotonia congenita

A

Becker’s

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3
Q

What is the animal model for CLC1 ion channel mutations

A

Fainting goats

Myotonic mice - Same mutation in same gene - inappropriate muscle contraction

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4
Q

What is the role of ClC1 in the muscle action potential

A

Vitally important in establishing muscle resting membrane potential - passive movement down conc grad - Drives negative muscle resting membrane potential

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5
Q

What is the G200R mutation of the CLC1 channel

A

Glycine to arginine transition mutation
Changes the voltage dependence of the channel - don’t open until much more positive Vm
This decreases the open probability
Resting membrane is therefore more depolarised
Only need to activate a small number of Ach receptors to reach action potential threshold

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6
Q

What is the drug used to treat myotonia congenita

A

Mexilitene - Inhibits v gated Na channels - gives a submaximal concentration to block some action potentials

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7
Q

What is the mutation needed to cause paramyotonia and K aggravated myotonia

A

Gain of function in the Nav1.4 channel (SCN4A gene)
Causes an issue with the inactivation of the channel - Depolarised longer - More calcium influx means more contractions occur

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8
Q

What happens when a patient suffers from malignant hyperthermia

A

Abnormal response to general anaesthetic
Increased Ca influx from sarcoplasmic reticulum causes mitochondria to have an oxidative burst - Increased contractility so patient goes rigid - increased need for oxygen so tachypnea - low plasma O2 but high CO2 so a respiratory and lactic acidosis - Rapid rise in temperature (1/5mins) Breakdown of muscle tissue leads to release of K so hyperkalemia - cardiac and neural excitability - death

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9
Q

What is the mutation that causes malignant hyperthermia

A

Ryanodine receptor type 1 - skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor -
Mechanically coupled with L-type calcium channels
Increases open probability of the channel due to the gain of function mutation that presents itself with the trigger of GAs

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10
Q

Why did farmers select pigs with pig malignant hyperthermia

A

Increased muscle mass due to increased amount of contraction

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11
Q

What is used to trigger malignant hyperthermia

A

Dantrolene - inhibits ryanodine receptor - blocking calcium influx and muscle contraction
IV hydration to replace lost water due to sweating
Diuretics to stop kidney damage as a result of toxic metabolites from muscle breakdown
NaHCO3 to counter acidosis
Mechanical hyperventilation to remove CO2

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