How do are muscular dystrophies classified?
Why make a diagnosis?
What is age of onset?
What are patterns of weakness?
What are inheritence patterns?
How are other systems involved?
brain
musculoskeletal
endocrine systems
eye
What is FKRP?
- mutations cause congenital muscular dystrophy, mental retardation and cerebellar cysts
What abnormalities might be seen on a muscle biopsy?
How are muscle biopsies done?
not a major procedure
needle in adults
What is immunohistochemistry?
What is absent alpha-dystroglycan staining in DMD and LGMD1C?
A) characterisation of the alpha-dystroglycan antibody. By western blotting, the antibdoy stains a 156 kDa band in muscle (M) and a 120 kDa band in brain
B) transverse sections of control mouse: alpha-dystroglycan shows homogenous staining around the muscle fibre surface. no signal detected on cyrosections of mdx mice.
B) on 6 µm cyrosections, near complete loss of alpha-dystroglycan expression observed in a LGMD 1C patient in contast to a normal expression of beta-dystroglycan and the laminin alpha-2-chain. Muscle tissue from a DMD patient serves as a negative control. Bar, 50µm
What is myotonic dystrophy (DM1)?
What is pattern of weakness in DM1?
What are clinical findings re: myotonic dystrophy?
What is congenital myotonic dystrophy?
What do you see in adults with myotonic dystrophy?
What is myotonia?
What do you see in muscle biopsy of DM1?
What is the molecular pathogenesis os myotonic dystrophy?
What is anticipation in DM1?
What is RNA gain of function in DM1?
What are possible therapeutic strategies for DM1?
RNA-based mechanisms to inhibit the toxic CUG-expanded RNA species in DM1
What are limb-girdle muscular dystrophies?
What is the classification of LGMDS?