3 research outputs found
Genotype-phenotype correlation in adult-onset acid maltase deficiency
We performed a clinical, biochemical, and genetic study in 16 patients from 11 families with adult‐onset acid maltase deficiency. All patients were compound heterozygotes and carried the IVS1(– 13T→G) transversion on one allele; the second allele harbored either a deletion of a T at position 525 in exon 2 (7 probands, 64%) or a deletion of exon 18 (1 proband, 9%). Detrioration of handicap was related to age, and decrease in vital capacity to duration of the symptomatic stage. Respiratory insufficiency was never the first manifestation. The levels of activity of serum creatine kinase and of β‐glucosidase in peripheral blood cells or muscle were helpful for the diagnosis, but did not have prognostic value. The adult form of acid maltase deficiency appears to be both clinically and genetically rather homogeneous; decrease of β‐glucosidase activity is the final common pathway leading to destruction of muscle fibers and progression of muscle weakness over a period of years. Copyrigh
Oxidative phosphorylation in human muscle in patients with ocular myopathy and after general anaesthesia
Abstract
The fuel preference of human muscle mitochondria has been given. Substrates which are oxidized with low velocity cannot be used to detect defects in oxidative phosphorylation. After general anaesthesia, the oxygen uptake with the different substrates is much lower than after local analgesia. The latter was therefore used in the subsequent study. In 15 out of 18 patients with ocular myopathy, defects in oxidative phosporylation could be detected in isolated muscle mitochondria prepared from freshly biopsied tissue. Measurement of the activity of segments of the respiratory chain in homogenate from frozen muscle showed no, or minor defects. In two of these patients showing exercise intolerance, decreased oxidation of NAD+-linked substrates and apparently normal mitochondrial DNA, further study revealed deficiency of pyruvate dehydrogenase in a girl with ptosis and a high Km of complex I for NADH in a man. Both patients responded to vitamin therapy
The clinical spectrum of limb girdle muscular dystrophy. A survey in the Netherlands
A cross-sectional study was performed in the Netherlands to define the clinical characteristics of the various subtypes within the broad and heterogeneous entity of limb girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD). An attempt was made to include all known cases of LGMD in the Netherlands. Out of the reported 200 patients, 105 who fulfilled strictly defined criteria were included. Forty-nine patients, mostly suffering from dystrophinopathies and facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy, appeared to be misdiagnosed. Thirty-four cases were sporadic, 42 patients came from autosomal recessive and 29 from autosomal dominant families. The estimated prevalence of LGMD in the Netherlands was at least 8.1 x 10-6. The clinical features of the autosomal recessive and sporadic cases were indistinguishable from those of the autosomal dominant patients, although half hypertrophy was seen more frequently, and the course of the disease was more severe in autosomal recessive and sporadic cases. The pectoralis, iliopsoas and gluteal muscles, hip adductors and hamstrings were the most affected muscles. Distal muscle involvement occurred late in the course of the disease. Facial weakness was a rare phenomenon. The severity of the clinical picture was correlated with a deteriorating lung function. All autosomal dominantly inherited cases showed a mild course, although in two families life-expectancy was reduced because of concomitant cardiac involvement