RESUMEN
Myotonia is the phenomenon of decrease of muscular relaxation rate, after either a contraction or a mechanical or electrical stimulus. Congenital myotonias are hereditary affections and do not present muscular dystrophy. The current trend is to group them as ionic channels diseases, together with the periodic paralysis. The authors accompanied the cases of seven patients, six males and one female, with ages ranging from 16 to 48 years (average 27 years) and onset of symptoms between 1 and 10 years (average 5 years). These patients presented a myotonic phenomenon unleashed by intensive contraction and global muscular hypertrophy. Three patients were diagnosed as cases of Becker type generalized myotonia because they presented a recessive autosomic heredity and/or transient episodes of muscular weakness. Two patients fitted the description of Thomsen congenital myotonia, with a pattern of dominating autosomic heredity and/or absence of weakness episodes or worsening factors for their condition. Two patients presented fluctuating myotonia, which because worse in cold weather or at potassium intake. The clinical diagnosis was confirmed through complementary tests (electroneuromyography, muscle biopsy and DNA study). Each of the patients made use of different drugs, in the search of optimal lessening of their myotonia. There were five reports of amelioration with the use of diphenilhydantoine; one report with the use of carbamazepine; three reports with the use of acetazolamide; one report with the use of a calcium channel blocker; one report with the use of a beta-adrenergic; one report with the use of thiazide; and none with the use of quinidine/procainamide.
Asunto(s)
Miotonía Congénita/diagnóstico , Adolescente , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Miotonía Congénita/tratamiento farmacológicoRESUMEN
The authors report the case of a female patient, 18 years of age, with slowly progressing weakness in upper and lower limbs since childhood. There were no significant antecedents. The neurologic examination showed mild proximal and distal motor deficit with a slight muscular retraction at the level of shoulders, elbows, coxofemural joints, knees and ankles; muscular hypotrophy in the legs and feet; reflexes were present and sensitivity was normal. Creatinephosphokinase showed an increase of one and a half times the normal value. Electroneuromyography: decrease in the amplitude and duration of action potentials and excessive recruitment of motor units, compatible with a primary muscular disease. A muscle biopsy with frozen sections (HE, Gomori, PAS, ATPases, NADH, SDH, acid and alcaline phosphatases, cytochrome oxidase and Oil-red-o) revealed a primary muscular disease characterized by the presence of nemalinic and intracytoplasmic spheroid bodies. Nemalinic bodies have been described with different structural abnormalities of muscle fibers; however, such association is rare. This is the second case report of concomitant occurrence of nemalinic and spheroid bodies.