Difference between revisions of "Neuromuscular pathology"
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====DDx:==== | ====DDx:==== | ||
* Anti-Jo1 myositis | * Anti-Jo1 myositis | ||
* Paraneoplastic myositis | |||
==Inclusion body myositis== | ==Inclusion body myositis== |
Revision as of 11:00, 14 October 2015
Neuromuscular pathology is the study of muscle and neurologic disease associated with muscle dysfunction. It is a part of neuropathology.
Muscle pathology is dealt together with neurologic disease as, at the presentation, they are not infrequently impossible to definitely distinguish.
Work-up
General
- Clinical history, including family history.
- Laboratory studies, e.g. CK.
- Nerve conduction and electromyography studies.
- Muscle biopsy.
Clinical
- Fasciculations - small involuntary muscle contraction, imply lower motor neuron lesion.
- Reflexes - see physical examination.
- Strength.
Laboratory studies
The CK suggest the type of disorder:[1]
- High ~200-300X normal -- suggests myogenic.
- Intermedidate ~20-30X normal -- possibly inflammatory.
- Low ~2-5X normal -- possibly neurogenic.
Notes:
- The CK value is most useful when it is very high.[2]
- Normal CK values:[3]
- Men: 24-195 unit/litre.
- Women: 24-170 units/litre.
Muscle structure/histology
Macroscopic to microscopic
Organization:[4]
- Muscle - surrounded by epimysium.
- Fascicle - surrounded by perimysium.
- Muscle fibre - muscle cell.
- Myofibrils - contractile elements within the muscle cell.
- Muscle fibre - muscle cell.
- Fascicle - surrounded by perimysium.
Notes:
- This is similar for nerves:[5]
- Nerve (surrounded by epineurium) -> Fascicle (surrounded by perineurium) -> Nerve fibre (surrounded by endoneurium).
Fibre types
Types | |||||||||||||||||||
Type 1 slow twitch | Type 2 fast twitch | ||||||||||||||||||
List - fibre types
Type 1 - AKA slow twitch:
- Predominantly oxidative metabolism, i.e. have lots of mitochondria.
Type 2 - AKA fast twitch:
- Predominantly glycolytic metabolism.
Mnemonic for type I fibres slow fat red ox:
- Slow twitch fibres are lipid rich (fat), (grossly) more red (due to mitochondria) and primarily have oxidative metabolism.
Table - fibre types
Parameter | Type I | Type II |
---|---|---|
Twitch speed | slow | fast |
Colour | red | white |
Fat content | higher | lower |
ATP production | oxidative | anaerobic glycoloysis |
Glycogen | higher | lower |
Resistance to fatigue | higher | lower |
ATPase quality | lower | higher |
Myoglobin | higher | lower |
Mitochondria | higher | lower |
Normal findings
Muscle-tendon junction
Features:
- Myofibrils frayed + adjacent to dense connective tissue.
Muscle-nerve junction
Features:
- Dunno. (???)
Images:
Muscle spindle
Features:
- Weird looking muscle cell. (???)
Image: Muscle spindle (anhb.uwa.edu.au).[7]
Abnormal findings
Iatrogenic
- Torn (muscle) fibres (in the process of extraction for examination):
- Membrane intact.
- Myofibril kaputt.
- No inflammation.
Pathologic
- Ragged red fibres = mitochondrial pathology.
- Image: Ragged red fibres (ouhsc.edu).
- Rimmed vacuoles = inclusion body myositis.
- PAS +++ = glycogen storage disease.
- Regenerative fibres = large nuclei, basophilic cytoplasm (incr. protein synthesis, incr. RNA).
Others:
- Target fibre - "hole in middle of myofibres" = neurogenic.
- Cores - central pale area along length of fibres = myopathic. (???)
- Image: Cores (ouhsc.edu).
Approach
General:
- Size variation - in groups (neurogenic) vs. singular (myogenic).
- Shape - angulated (neurogenic) vs. round (myogenic).
- Position of nuclei - peripheral (normal); central (myogenic; centronuclear myopathy[8]).
- Necrosis - suggests myogenic.
- Fibrosis - suggests myogenic.
- Inflammation - suggest myogenic vs. systemic inflammatory.
Other:
- Obvious abnormality vs. minimal change.
- Diffuse vs. focal change.
Processing of muscle biopsies
- Formalin fixed (formalin fixed-paraffin embedded).
- Frozen tissue for histology.
- Frozen tissue for biochemistry.
- Fragment for electron microscopy (glutaraldehyde fixed).
SMH labeling
- "E" = "frozens"; done on frozen tissue.
- IHC done on these.
- May have the label "2" ... even though there is no part 2.
- Blue slides = "plastics", i.e. plastic embedded.
- Stained with methylene blue.[9] vs. toluidine blue. (???)
- Thin sections: 0.1 - 1 micrometres.
- Normal SMH numbering = "paraffin".
Patterns (pathologic)
Overview
Neuromuscular pathology | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Neurogenic | Myogenic | Other/Mixed | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Neurogenic | Myogenic | Notes | Image | |
Shape of fibres | angulated | round | round fibres[10] | |
Small fibres | groups ("group atrophy") |
singular | group atrophy[11] | |
Large fibres |
no | +/-scattered | "hypercontracted fibres" |
DMD (WC) |
Fibre type grouping |
yes (d/t chronic denervation + reinnervation)[12] |
yes (???) | based on ATPase, NADH-TR stains |
ATPase 9.4[13], NADH-TR[14] |
List
Neurogenic:
- Angulated myocytes.
- Groups of small fibres.
- Apparent increase of nuclei.
Myogenic:
- Round myocytes.
- +/-Intense (darker) cytoplasm.
- +/-Fibrosis (between fibres).
- +/-Nuclear internalization.
- +/-Necrosis.
Detail
- Segmental demyelination - nerve/CNS abnormality.
- Axonal degeneration - nerve/CNS abnormality.
- Reinnervation - nerve injury.
- Myopathy - something is wrong with the muscle fibres.
Stains for muscle biopsies
Standard
Stain | Comment | Image |
H&E stain | routine | H&E[15], H&E (WC) |
Gomori trichrome | good for nemaline rods, mitochondrial pathology (ragged red fibres - at edge of myocyte) |
RRF (WC) |
PAS | glycogen storage disorders | [1][16] |
Congo red | find amyloid; seen in inclusion body myositis |
[2][17] |
Oil red O | lipid more in type 1 fibres |
ORO |
ATPase pH4.2 ATPase pH9.4 |
should have "checkerboard pattern" in normal; see table below |
[3][16] |
NADH-TR | should have "checkerboard pattern" in normal; type 1 fibres = light blue, type 2 fibres = white |
ATPase stain pattern/fibre type
Type 1 slow twitch |
Type 2 fast twitch | |
pH 4.2 | dark | light |
pH 9.4 | light | dark |
Special - mitochondrial pathology
Stain | Comment | Image |
Succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) |
stains mitochondria; usu. +ve in mitochondrial disease[18] |
[4][19], SDH (WC) |
Cytochrome oxidase (COX) | stains mitochondria; usu. -ve in mitochondrial disease |
[5][19] |
COX-SDH | used to look for mitochondrial disease |
Enzymatic/genetic stuff
Stain | Comment | Image |
Phosphorylase | ||
Adenylate deaminase | ||
Acid phosphatase (ACPH) | necrosis (red) | |
Alkaline phosphatase (ALPH) | regeneration (punctate - black) |
Dunno:
- Toluidine blue - myopathies.
- Image: Nemaline rods (wustl.edu).[20]
IHC
- Dystrophy panel.
- Dystrophin[21] - Duchenne muscular dystrophy (onset usu. <3 years), Becker's muscular dystrophy (onset usu. 20s or 30s).
- Membranous staining is normal. Loss of membranous staining = pathologic.
- Tested with three antibodies -- as the protein is hueuge.
- Membranous staining is normal. Loss of membranous staining = pathologic.
- Spectrin - a cause of long QT syndrome. (???)
- Dystrophin[21] - Duchenne muscular dystrophy (onset usu. <3 years), Becker's muscular dystrophy (onset usu. 20s or 30s).
- Lymphocytic markers (CD45, CD3, CD4, CD8, CD20).
- MAC - inclusion body myositis.
- APP - inclusion body myositis (?), axonal swellings.
- Ubquitin - inclusion body myositis.
- TDP-43 (also TDP43) - cytoplasmic staining in IBM.
- Normally stains the nucleus.
- Same protein that that in implicated in ALS and frontotemporal dementia.
- Normally stains the nucleus.
List of common conditions
Neurogenic:
- Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
- Spinal muscular atrophy.
- Trauma.
- Vascular disease.
- Infective process.
- ?Motor neuron disease.
Myopathic:
- Inflammatory:
- Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
- Becker muscular dystrophy.
- Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy.
- Myotonic dystrophy.
- Metabolic - glycogen storage disease.
Other:
- Myasthenia gravis.
- Mitochondrial myopathy.
- Congenital fibre type disproportion.
- Periodic paralysis.
Groups of disorders
Inflammatory myopathy
DDx:
- Polymyositis.
- Disease of adults.
- Inclusion body myositis (IBM).
- Distal weakness.
- Can be sporadic or hereditary.
- Dermatomyositis.
- Acute development.
- May be associated with malignancy.
- Granulomatous myositis.
- Graft-versus-host disease.
- Infectious myositis.
- Rare.
Quick overview:
Dermatomyositis | Polymyositis | sporadic Inclusion body myositis | |
Myositis type | Perifascicular | Diffuse | Diffuse (limited inflammation) |
Histology | Perivascular inflammation, Perifascicular damage. | Endomysial inflammation and damage. | Endomysial inflammation, rimmed vacuoles withe eosinophilic inclusions, neurogenic changes. |
Immunostaining | CD4+ B-cell lymphocytes predominate, C5b9 complement complex deposits in capillaries. | CD8+ lymphocytes invading non-necrotic fibers. | Mainly CD8-positive lymphocytes. |
Electron microscopy | Tubulovesicular inclusions. | Nothing special. | Filamentous inclusions. |
Exemplary image |
Partial invasion of muscle fibres
DDx:[22]
- Polymyositis.
- Inclusion body myositis (IBM).
Images:
Muscular dystrophy
General
- DDx: large.
A short DDx:
- Duchenne's muscular dystrophy.[21]
- Becker's muscular dystrophy.
- Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy.
- Lotsa different mutations, autosomal dominant and recessive variants.
- Myotonic dystrophy.[23][24]
Microscopic
Features:
- Endomysial fibrosis.
- Hypercontracted fibres (large muscle fibres).
Images:
Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy
General
- A group of muscular dystrophies with childhood or adult onset.[25]
- Rare.
- Usually autosomal recessive.
- Treatment: none; supportive only.
Subtypes
- Sarcoglycanopathy.
- Calpainopahty.
- Dysferlinopathy.
Notes:
- Can be demonstrated with IHC.
DDx
- DMD gene associated MDs (Duchenne MD, Becker MD).
- Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD).
- Emery-Dreifuss MD (EDMD).
- Congenital MD (CMD).
- Inflammatory myopathies.
Mitochondrial disorders
General
- Onset childhood to adulthood.
- Heteroplasmy - variable distribution of badness within affected individuals.
- Leads to "threshold effect".
Microscopic
- Trichrome most useful - find the ragged red fibres - usu. at the cell periphery.
- COX-SDH:
- Non-staining (???).
- Peripheral blue accumulation in occasional cells.
EM
Features:
- Crystalloid inclusions.[26]
- "Ballooned" mitochondria; loss of cristae -- loss of membranous folds within mitochrondrion.
Type 2 fibre atrophy
General
DDx:
- Disuse.
- Space travel.
- Steroids.
- Others.
Microscopic
Features:
- Atrophy for type 2 atrophy.
Images
Specific entities
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- Abbreviated ALS.
General
- Abbreviated ALS.
- Affects - corticospinal tract - gliosis.
Microscopic
Features:
- Neurogenic pattern:
- Group atrophy.
- +/-Target fibres.
Dermatomyositis
- For the skin manifestations see: Inflammatory_skin_disorders#Dermatomyositis.
General
- Complement mediated disease - membrane attack complex.
- Usually middle age.
- Associated skin rash is common.
- May precede or follow muscle pathology.
- Associated with malignancy in approximately 10% of cases.[27]
Clinical
- If the characteristic skin lesions are absent... it is likely idiopathic inflammatory myositis and related to diabetes mellitus.[28]
Microscopic
Features:
- Perifascicular inflammation with perifascicular atrophy - key feature.
- Loss of vessels around muscle fibres.
- Vessels should be where more than 3 or more fibres are opposed to one another.
Images
EM
- Endothelial tubuloreticular inclusions (abbrev. TRIs) - undulating tubules in the smooth ER, usu. perinuclear;[29] not pathognomonic - may be seen in inclusion body myositis.[30]
Images:
DDx:
- Anti-Jo1 myositis
- Paraneoplastic myositis
Inclusion body myositis
General
- Usually elderly.
- Thought to be related to Alzheimer's disease due to similar staining with congo red and several IHC stains.[31]
Microscopic
Features:
- Inflammation.
- Vacuolated muscle fibres (with proteineous aggregates) - key feature.
- Vacuolation = "inclusion".
- Usually in the centroidal location.
- Vacuolation = "inclusion".
DDx:
IHC
Features:[31]
- Congo red +ve.
- APP +ve, ubiquitin +ve, tau +ve. (???)
EM
- Inclusion bodies - tubulovescicular material.[32]
Polymyositis
General
- Tx: steroids.
Microscopic
Features:[33]
- Lymphocytes - may be in large clusters.
- "Partial invasion" - lymphocytes within the muscle fibres - key feature.
- Regenerating fibres with enlarged nuclei.
DDx:
Images:
IHC
Features:[33]
- T cells > B cells.
- Endomysial - T cells.
- Perimysial - B cells.
Granulomatous myositis
General
Etiology:[34]
- Sarcoidosis
- Idiopathic
- Infectious (Tuberculosis, Syphillis, Brucellosis
- Foreign-body reaction
- Thymoma - myasthenia gravis
- Lymphoma - paraneoplastic
- Primary biliary cirrhosis
Metabolic myopathy
Microscopic
Fetures:
- Intramuscular storage deposits.
- PAS positive stain in glycogen storage disease.
Myotonic dystrophy
Microscopic
Features:
- Internal nuclei/central nuclei.
Nemaline myopathy
General
- A type of congenital myopathy.
- Paediatric thingy.
- Rods are seen in trichrome stain
Centronuclear myopathy
- AKA myotubular myopathy
- Several types
- X-chromosomal recessive: floppy infant
- austosmal dominant: late onset with proximal involvement, ptosis, opthalmoplegia
Image centronuclear myopathy[35]).
Drug-induced rhabdomyolysis
- AKA drug-induced acute necrotizing myopathy.
General
Clinical:[36]
- Myalgias.
- Myoglobinuria.
- Increased elevated serum creatine kinase (CK).
Causes:
- Ecstasy (MDMA).
- Statins.
Microscopic
Features:
- Muscle necrosis.
- No inflammation.
- No perifascicular atrophy.
Images:
Stains
- PAS +ve fibres (macrophages).
IHC
- CD45 -ve (no lymphocytes).
EM
- Negative for tubuloreticular inclusions.
Trichinosis
- See Microorganisms.
Parasitic disease classically associated with consumption of uncooked pork.
Nerve stuff
General
- Most common biopsy: sural nerve.
Stains
Myelin stain:
- Blue = myelin.
Gomori trichrome:
- Axon = green.
- Myelin = red.
Degenerative changes
Types:[37]
- Wallerian degeneration.
- Axonal degeneration.
- Segmental demyelination.
Wallerian degeneration
- Digestion chambers - key feature.
Images:
Diseases
- Guillain–Barré syndrome.
- Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP).[38]
- Essentially chronic Guillain–Barré syndrome.
- Toxic polyneuropathy (drug toxicity).[39]
See also
References
- ↑ URL: http://moon.ouhsc.edu/kfung/jty1/NeuroHelp/ZNEWWU10.htm. Accessed on: 27 October 2010.
- ↑ Filosto M, Tonin P, Vattemi G, et al. (January 2007). "The role of muscle biopsy in investigating isolated muscle pain". Neurology 68 (3): 181–6. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000252252.29532.cc. PMID 17224570.
- ↑ URL: http://www.gpnotebook.co.uk/simplepage.cfm?ID=1436155929. Accessed on: 27 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Skeletal_muscle.jpg. Accessed on: 25 October 2010.
- ↑ Martini, Frederic H. (2003). Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology (6th ed.). Benjamin Cummings. pp. 438. ISBN 978-0805359336.
- ↑ URL: http://www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/corepages/connective/connect.htm. Accessed on: 4 November 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/corepages/muscle/muscle.htm. Accessed on: 28 November 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://www.igbmc.fr/recherche/Dep_NG/Eq_JLaporte/JL3.html. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://www.nature.com/modpathol/journal/v18/n5/full/3800344a.html. Accessed on: 26 November 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://nmdinfo.org/lectures/info.php?id=8. Accessed on: 25 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://neuropathology.neoucom.edu/chapter9/chapter9fALS.html. Accessed on: 25 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://neuromuscular.wustl.edu/lab/mbiopsy.htm#fibertype. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://missinglink.ucsf.edu/lm/ids_104_musclenerve_path/student_musclenerve/musclepath.html. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://moon.ouhsc.edu/kfung/JTY1/Com04/Com401-3-Diss.htm. Accessed on: 28 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://www.rvc.ac.uk/Research/Labs/NeuroLab/MuscleBiopsy.cfm. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 URL: http://neuromuscular.wustl.edu/pathol/dermmyo.htm. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://neuromuscular.wustl.edu/pathol/ibmpaget.htm. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://moon.ouhsc.edu/kfung/jty1/neurohelp/ZNEWWU10.htm. Accessed on: 2 March 2011.
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 URL: http://moon.ouhsc.edu/kfung/JTY1/Com04/Com401-3-Diss.htm. Accessed on: 28 October 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://neuromuscular.wustl.edu/pathol/rod.htm. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) 310200
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 URL: http://neuromuscular.wustl.edu/pathol/inflammation.htm#cellinv. Accessed on: 3 November 2010.
- ↑ Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) 160900
- ↑ Online 'Mendelian Inheritance in Man' (OMIM) 602668
- ↑ URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK1408/. Accessed on: 25 November 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://moon.ouhsc.edu/kfung/jty1/neurotest/Q09-Ans.htm. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ Chen YJ, Wu CY, Huang YL, Wang CB, Shen JL, Chang YT (2010). "Cancer risks of dermatomyositis and polymyositis: a nationwide cohort study in Taiwan". Arthritis Res. Ther. 12 (2): R70. doi:10.1186/ar2987. PMC 2888225. PMID 20398365. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2888225/.
- ↑ Limaye VS, Lester S, Blumbergs P, Roberts-Thomson PJ (May 2010). "Idiopathic inflammatory myositis is associated with a high incidence of hypertension and diabetes mellitus". Int J Rheum Dis 13 (2): 132–7. doi:10.1111/j.1756-185X.2010.01470.x. PMID 20536597.
- ↑ Stoltenburg-Didinger G, Genth E (June 2009). "[Dermatomyositis]" (in German). Z Rheumatol 68 (4): 287–94. doi:10.1007/s00393-008-0398-y. PMID 19330338.
- ↑ Katzberg HD, Munoz DG (2010). "Tubuloreticular inclusions in inclusion body myositis". Clin. Neuropathol. 29 (4): 262–6. PMID 20569678.
- ↑ 31.0 31.1 Askanas V, Engel WK (November 1995). "New advances in the understanding of sporadic inclusion-body myositis and hereditary inclusion-body myopathies". Curr Opin Rheumatol 7 (6): 486–96. PMID 8579968.
- ↑ URL: http://neuromuscular.wustl.edu/pathol/ibm.htm. Accessed on: 3 November 2010.
- ↑ 33.0 33.1 URL: http://moon.ouhsc.edu/kfung/jty1/neurohelp/ZNN0TA01.htm. Accessed on: 25 February 2012.
- ↑ Prieto-González, S.; Grau, JM.. "Diagnosis and classification of granulomatous myositis.". Autoimmun Rev 13 (4-5): 372-4. doi:10.1016/j.autrev.2014.01.017. PMID 24424169.
- ↑ URL: http://www.igbmc.fr/recherche/Dep_NG/Eq_JLaporte/JL3.html. Accessed on: 26 October 2010.
- ↑ Coco, TJ.; Klasner, AE. (Apr 2004). "Drug-induced rhabdomyolysis.". Curr Opin Pediatr 16 (2): 206-10. PMID 15021204.
- ↑ URL: http://missinglink.ucsf.edu/lm/ids_104_musclenerve_path/student_musclenerve/nervepath.html. Accessed on: 9 November 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://path.upmc.edu/cases/case426.html. Accessed on: 14 November 2010.
- ↑ URL: http://path.upmc.edu/cases/case173.html. Accessed on: 8 January 2012.