6533b870fe1ef96bd12cfcab
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Macrophagic myofasciitis plus (distinct types of muscular dystrophy).
Hans H. GoebelP. F. SchmidtHarald D. MüllerC. SommerF. K. H. Van. Landeghemsubject
MalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyNeuromuscular diseaseBiopsyMuscle Fibers SkeletalMuscular DystrophiesLesionMicroscopy Electron TransmissionBiopsymedicineHumansMuscular dystrophyMuscle SkeletalMuscle biopsymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMacrophagesMacrophagic myofasciitisInfantGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseDermatologyHypotoniaPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessdescription
Macrophagic myofasciitis (MMF) is a well-known lesion following vaccination with aluminium-containing vaccines. It has abundantly been reported in adults and several times in children, often in single patients or in rather small cohorts. Only few of these published reports on children have shown distinct myopathology of another neuromuscular disease except for MMF. Indications for biopsy often were nondescript clinical features in children, such as hypotonia or delay in motor development but, apparently, never that of suspected MMF. Thus, in previous reports as well as in our two patients, encountering MMF in the biopsied tissue specimens was coincidental. Our two unrelated patients with MMF also had two separate types of muscular dystrophy, a merosinopathy and dystrophinopathy, showing a combination of myopathologically well-defined neuromuscular diseases, muscular dystrophies and MMF. Detecting such a combination of two separate conditions may, in the future, be rare when non-invasive techniques, e. g., genetic, will have replaced muscle biopsy in ascertaining hereditary neuromuscular conditions, especially in children.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-08-01 | Neuropediatrics |