Search results for "Muscle disease"

showing 7 items of 7 documents

Congenital muscular dystrophy: from muscle to brain.

2016

Congenital muscular dystrophies (CMDs) are a wide group of muscular disorders that manifest with very early onset of muscular weakness, sometime associated to severe brain involvement. The histologic pattern of muscle anomalies is typical of dystrophic lesions but quite variable depending on the different stages and on the severity of the disorder. Recent classification of CMDs have been reported most of which based on the combination of clinical, biochemical, molecular and genetic findings, but genotype/phenotype correlation are in constant progression due to more diffuse utilization of the molecular analysis. In this article, the Authors report on CMDs belonging to the group of dystroglyc…

0301 basic medicinePediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyMuscle-eye-brain diseaseMuscular dystrophiesDiseaseReviewSeverity of Illness IndexNODiagnosis Differential03 medical and health sciencesMuscular dystrophie0302 clinical medicineBrain involvement; Congenital muscle diseases; Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy; Muscle-eye-brain disease; Muscular dystrophies; Walker-Warburg syndrome;Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophySeverity of illnessmedicineHumansFukuyama congenital muscular dystrophyBrain involvement; Congenital muscle diseaseWalker–Warburg syndromeCongenital muscle diseasesWalker-Warburg syndromebusiness.industryInfant NewbornBrainmedicine.diseaseVery early onsetMolecular analysis030104 developmental biologyClinical diagnosisCongenital muscle diseaseCongenital muscular dystrophyPhysical therapybusinessBrain involvement030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Aging-associated genes and let-7 microRNAs: a contribution to myogenic program dysregulation in oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy

2019

Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is a late-onset muscle disease caused by an abnormal (GCN) triplet expansion within the polyadenylate-binding protein nuclear 1 gene and consequent mRNA pr...

0301 basic medicineMaleAgingOculopharyngealMuscle DevelopmentBiochemistryMyoblasts0302 clinical medicine80 and overMuscular DystrophyHMGB1 ProteinPAX7 Transcription FactorCell DifferentiationdifferentiationMiddle AgedCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleMyogeninMitogen-Activated Protein KinasesBiotechnologyDifferentiation regeneration skeletal muscleAdultBiologyInclusion BodyOculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy03 medical and health sciencesmicroRNAGeneticsmedicineHumansGenetic Predisposition to Diseasedifferentiation; regeneration; skeletal muscle; Adult; Aged; Aged 80 and over; Aging; Antigens Neoplasm; Cell Differentiation; Female; Gene Expression Regulation; HMGB1 Protein; Humans; Male; MicroRNAs; Middle Aged; Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases; Muscle Development; Muscular Dystrophy Oculopharyngeal; Myoblasts; Myogenin; Myositis Inclusion Body; PAX7 Transcription Factor; Genetic Predisposition to Diseaseskeletal muscleAntigensMolecular BiologyGeneAgedMessenger RNAMyositisRegeneration (biology)Skeletal musclemedicine.diseaseMicroRNAs030104 developmental biologyMuscle diseaseGene Expression RegulationregenerationNeoplasm030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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X-Linked myopathy with excessive autophagy: A new hereditary muscle disease

1988

We report on 3 brothers with a myopathy that also affected their maternal grandfather and great-uncle. Characteristic features are onset in early childhood, very slow progression, normal life expectancy, weakness of proximal limb muscles, especially in the legs, elevation of serum creatine kinase, and no cardiac or intellectual involvement. In biopsy material muscle fibers are almost never necrotic but show excessive autophagic activity and exocytosis of the phagocytosed material. We suggest that this family has an undescribed type of congenital myopathy, for which we propose the name X-linked myopathy with excessive autophagy.

WeaknessPathologymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryAutophagyAnatomymedicine.diseaseCongenital myopathyX-linked myopathy with excessive autophagyMuscle diseaseNeurologySlow progressionMedicineNeurology (clinical)Biopsy materialmedicine.symptombusinessMyopathyAnnals of Neurology
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Common Data Elements for Muscle Biopsy Reporting

2015

Context There is no current standard among myopathologists for reporting muscle biopsy findings. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has recently launched a common data element (CDE) project to standardize neuromuscular data collected in clinical reports and to facilitate their use in research. Objective To develop a more-uniform, prospective reporting tool for muscle biopsies, incorporating the elements identified by the CDE project, in an effort to improve reporting and educational resources. Design The variation in current biopsy reporting practice was evaluated through a study of 51 muscle biopsy reports from self-reported diagnoses of genetically confirmed or u…

0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyMuscle biopsymedicine.diagnostic_testExtramuralbusiness.industryMEDLINEGeneral MedicineArticlePathology and Forensic Medicine03 medical and health sciencesMedical Laboratory Technology030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineMuscle diseaseBiopsyEmergency medicineEducational resourcesmedicinePhysical therapyMedical diagnosisbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryArchives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
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Deleting Full Length Titin Versus the Titin M-Band Region Leads to Differential Mechanosignaling and Cardiac Phenotypes

2019

Background: Titin is a giant elastic protein that spans the half-sarcomere from Z-disk to M-band. It acts as a molecular spring and mechanosensor and has been linked to striated muscle disease. The pathways that govern titin-dependent cardiac growth and contribute to disease are diverse and difficult to dissect. Methods: To study titin deficiency versus dysfunction, the authors generated and compared striated muscle specific knockouts (KOs) with progressive postnatal loss of the complete titin protein by removing exon 2 (E2-KO) or an M-band truncation that eliminates proper sarcomeric integration, but retains all other functional domains (M-band exon 1/2 [M1/2]-KO). The authors evaluated c…

Cardiomyopathy DilatedMaleSarcomeresanimal structuresVentricular Dysfunction Rightmacromolecular substances030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyMechanotransduction CellularVentricular Function LeftArticleMuscle hypertrophyVentricular Dysfunction Left03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhysiology (medical)AnimalsMedicineMyocytes CardiacMuscle Skeletal030304 developmental biologyMice Knockout0303 health sciencesbiologybusiness.industryMolecular springmusculoskeletal systemPhenotypeCell biologyMuscular AtrophyPhenotypeMuscle diseasecardiovascular systemVentricular Function Rightbiology.proteinTitinCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessProtein KinasesGene DeletionDifferential (mathematics)Circulation
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Editorial: Myokines, Adipokines, Cytokines in Muscle Pathophysiology

2020

[No abstract available]

Skeletal muscle diseasephysical exercise skeletal muscle disease inflammation myokines organ cross talkskeletal muscle diseaselcsh:QP1-981Settore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaPhysiologybusiness.industrymyokinesAdipokineInflammationPhysical exerciseBioinformaticslcsh:PhysiologyPathophysiologyinflammation; myokines; organ cross talk; physical exercise; skeletal muscle diseaseinflammationphysical exercisePhysiology (medical)Myokinemedicineorgan cross talkmedicine.symptombusinessFrontiers in Physiology
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Immune-mediated rippling muscle disease with myasthenia gravis: a report of seven patients with long-term follow-up in two.

2009

We report seven patients with immune-mediated rippling muscle disease (iRMD) and AChR-antibody positive myasthenia gravis (MG) without germline caveolin-3 gene mutations. We describe the follow-up of two patients and the clinical features of five new patients (1 female, 4 male, aged 32 to 69 years). These presented with significant generalized, exercise-induced and electrically-silent muscle rippling with myalgia, combined with generalized MG. In two of the seven patients, MG appeared before iRMD. Mediastinal imaging excluded thymic alterations in all, although two had other coincident tumours. Myalgia and rippling were aggravated by acetylcholinesterase-inhibitor treatment. Generalized MG …

myalgiaAdultMalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCaveolin 3Immunogenicmedicine.medical_treatmentMuscle Fibers SkeletalMuscle ProteinsCaveolin-3; Immunogenic; Myasthenia gravis; Rippling muscle disease; TherapyAzathioprineThymus GlandGene mutationBiologyCaveolaeDysferlinCaveolin-3Muscular DiseasesAzathioprineMyasthenia GravismedicineHumansMuscle SkeletalGenetics (clinical)AgedAutoantibodiesSarcolemmaElectromyographyAutoantibodyRippling muscle diseasePlasmapheresisMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMyasthenia gravisNeurologyPediatrics Perinatology and Child Healthbiology.proteinPlasmapheresisFemaleSteroidsTherapyNeurology (clinical)Cholinesterase Inhibitorsmedicine.symptommedicine.drugFollow-Up StudiesMuscle ContractionNeuromuscular disorders : NMD
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