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      A importância da biópsia muscular no diagnóstico de neuromiopatias Translated title: The role of muscle biopsy in the diagnosis of neuromuscular diseases

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          Abstract

          As doenças neuromusculares têm quadro clínico variado e manifestam-se principalmente em pacientes jovens, determinando incapacidade funcional progressiva. Avaliação clínica, eletromiografia, bioquímica sangüínea e biópsia muscular são indispensáveis para o correto diagnóstico etiológico. Apresentamos casuística de 124 casos diagnosticados por biópsia muscular com histoquímica enzimática, microscopia eletrônica e avaliação morfométrica da variação no diâmetro das fibras afetadas, comentando os principais elementos diagnósticos anátomo-patológicos. Necrose muscular, grande variabilidade no diâmetro de fibras e infiltração adiposa muscular predominam nos quadros miopáticos distróficos, que representaram 26% de nossos casos. Redução volumétrica com angulação das fibras sugeriu origem neurogênica, sendo a alteração importante detectada em 27% de nossos diagnósticos. Miopatia mitocondrial caracteriza-se por acúmulos periféricos de grande quantidade de mitocôndrias com ultraestrutura alterada. Cuidados especiais na escolha e coleta da amostra muscular podem minimizar achados inespecíficos ou alterações tipo estádio terminal que impossibilitam a caracterização adequada da doença.

          Translated abstract

          Most of the neuromuscular diseases have similar clinical presentation affecting mainly young patients. Clinical observations, serum enzymes, eletromyographic studies and muscle biopsy are required for correct diagnosis. The authors show the results of morphological observations of a series of 124 muscle biopsies studied between 1988 and 1992 using conventional paraffin embedded material, frozen sections of muscle tissue stained by several histochemical techniques, electron microscopic observations and, in some cases, morphometric analysis of the smaller diameter of at least 100 random muscle fibres. Neurogenic atrophy was present in 27% of the cases (n=33), dystrophic muscle was diagnosed in 26%, mitochondrial myopathy in 7% while inflammatory and metabolic myopathies were less frequent. In the group of muscle dystrophy most cases were of Duchenne type showing great variation in fibre size ranging from 10 to 110 microns (mean=30 to 70 microns). There was also muscle necrosis and fatty changes. Neurogenic biopsies showed fibre atrophy with clustering of nuclei and group atrophy. Electron microscopic observations in cases of Werdnig-Hoffmann showed tiny fibres with less than 5 microns in great dimension and also with redundant basal laminae. Cases of mitochondrial myopathy showed the classical ragged red fibres and many different mitochondrial abnormalities under the electron microscope. Many cases (33%) showed only minor structural abnormalities or end-stage alterations with marked fatty infiltration and fibrosis so that a definitive diagnosis failed to be achieved. The correct selection and handling of muscle biopsies is important for adequate diagnosis in neuromuscular pathology.

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          Primary structure of dystrophin-associated glycoproteins linking dystrophin to the extracellular matrix.

          The primary sequence of two components of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex has been established by complementary, DNA cloning. The transmembrane 43K and extracellular 156K dystrophin-associated glycoproteins (DAGs) are encoded by a single messenger RNA and the extracellular 156K DAG binds laminin. Thus, the 156K DAG is a new laminin-binding glycoprotein which may provide a linkage between the sarcolemma and extracellular matrix. These results support the hypothesis that the dramatic reduction in the 156K DAG in Duchenne muscular dystrophy leads to a loss of a linkage between the sarcolemma and extracellular matrix and that this may render muscle fibres more susceptible to necrosis.
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            The mutant mdx: inherited myopathy in the mouse. Morphological studies of nerves, muscles and end-plates.

            The mdx mutant mouse was first observed during a survey of genetic variations of pyruvate kinase in the mouse. Affected mice have high serum levels of this enzyme and although showing little disability they have widespread and severe muscle disease. Light and electron microscopy, muscle enzyme histochemistry and combined cholinesterase-silver impregnations were used for the study of affected and control animals aged 1 day to 1 year. An early ultrastructural abnormality present already at 1 day was scattered focal streaming of Z-lines. Later there was also segmental muscle fibre necrosis and regeneration. The proportion of muscle fibres showing either necrosis, regeneration or internal nuclei was assessed in several muscles, at ages ranging from 10 days to 1 year. Acute segmental necrosis and regeneration were most marked at 1 to 2 months, although they were present at all ages. The number of fibres with internal nuclei increased progressively until 3 months when 70-80% showed this abnormality. Nerve terminals were unaffected but there was a reduction in the number and depth of postsynaptic folds at motor end-plates in adult animals, confirmed by morphometric analysis. Quantitative study of L4 motor root and tibial nerve showed that fibre numbers, axonal calibres and myelin sheath thickness were normal at all ages. No qualitative abnormalities were found in the CNS or other organs. The findings strongly suggest that the mdx mutant has a primary muscle disease and that the nervous system is normal.
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              O valor da bióöpsia muscular em neurologia: anälise de 290 exames a fresco e pela histoquímica

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                anp
                Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria
                Arq. Neuro-Psiquiatr.
                Academia Brasileira de Neurologia - ABNEURO (São Paulo, SP, Brazil )
                0004-282X
                1678-4227
                September 1994
                : 52
                : 3
                : 370-375
                Affiliations
                [01] Curitiba orgnameUniversidade Federal do Paraná orgdiv1Serviço de Anatomia Patológica do Hospital de Clínicas
                [02] Curitiba orgnameUniversidade Federal do Paraná orgdiv1Hospital de Clínicas
                Article
                S0004-282X1994000300014 S0004-282X(94)05200314
                10.1590/S0004-282X1994000300014
                314ae122-a1ce-4fd3-b6b9-55911425c9ac

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 19, Pages: 6
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                SciELO Brazil


                electron microscopy,muscle histochemistry,neuromuscular diseases,myopathy,microscopia eletrônica,histoquimica,neuro-miopatias,doenças neuromusculares,miopatia

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