Muscle Disease / Myopathies Flashcards

1
Q

What are inflammatory myopathies characterised by?

A

Weakness

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2
Q

What are the two inflammatory myopathies

A

Polymyositis and dermatomyositis

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3
Q

What is there an increased risk of with inflammatory myopathies

A

Malignancy, which is screened for at presentation

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4
Q

How do inflammatory myopathies usually present

A

Worsening over months, usually symmetrical, proximial muscles

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5
Q

What 3 signs can be seen in dermatomyositis

A

Gottron’s sign, heliotrope rash and shawl sign

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6
Q

What are 2 exam tests to do on inflammatory myositis

A

Confrontational testing (direct testing of power) and isotonic testing (30 second sit to stand test - to see tiring in muscles)

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7
Q

What muscle enzyme can be looked for

A

CK

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8
Q

What are the autoantibodies screened for in inflammatory myositis

A

ANA, Anti Jo 1, myositis specific antibodies

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9
Q

Why are patients screened for electrolytes/ calicum/ PTH/ TSH

A

to exclude other causes of weakness

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10
Q

What are the changes seen in electromyography

A

increased fibrillations, abnormal motor potentials, complex repetitive discharges

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11
Q

What is the definitive test of inflammatory myositis

A

Muscle biopsy

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12
Q

What does the muscle biopsy show

A

perivascular inflammation and muscle necrosis

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13
Q

What is the treatment for inflammatory myositis

A

Steroids to start off with (not good long term) and immunosuppression

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14
Q

What is the main symptom in inflammatory myositis

A

Muscle weakness

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15
Q

What is the most definitive diagnostic test for polymyositis?

A

Muscle biopsy

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16
Q

What age group does polymyalgia rheumatica affect

A

Elderly people - definitely over 50/60

17
Q

What condition is polymyalgia rheumatica associated with in 15% of patients

A

Temporal arteritis/ giant cell arteritis

18
Q

What is the main symptom of polymyalgia rheumatica

A

Muscle pain and stiffness

19
Q

What are the areas of pain in polymyalgia rheumatica

A

Ache in shoulder and hip girdle, usually symmetrical

20
Q

What are the features of giant cell arteritis

A

Headache, scalp tenderness, jaw claudication, visual loss (amaurosis fugax - blackout) and tender, enlarged non pulsatile temporal arteries

21
Q

How is the diagnosis of polymyalgia rheumatica

A

Raised inflammatory markers (may do temporal artery USS or biopsy) - will show thickened artery wall

22
Q

How should polymyalgia rheumatica be managed without giant cell arteritis

A

Prednisolone 15mg reducing course over 18 months

23
Q

How should polymyalgia rheumatica be managed with giant cell arteritis

A

Prednisolone 40mg reducing course over 18 months

24
Q

How common is fibromyalgia

A

Commonest cause of musculoskeletal pain in women 22-50 years

25
Q

What is fibromyalgia not associated with

A

Inflammation

26
Q

What may bring on fibromyalgia

A

Emotional or physical trauma

27
Q

What are the predominant symptoms of fibromyalgia

A

Fatigue, headaches, muscle pain, poor sleep pattern, MSK chest pain, anxiety, depression, some tender points

28
Q

How can fibromyalgia be diagnosed

A

Of exclusion

29
Q

How can fibromyalgia be treated

A

Patient education, gabapentin, pregabalin, anti depressants, MDT approach, graded exercise