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      Muscle Na+ channelopathies: MRI detects intracellular 23Na accumulation during episodic weakness.

      Neurology
      Adult, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, methods, Male, Metabolic Clearance Rate, Middle Aged, Muscle Weakness, diagnosis, metabolism, Muscle, Skeletal, pathology, Muscular Diseases, Myotonic Disorders, Paralysis, Hyperkalemic Periodic, Sodium Channels, genetics, Sodium Isotopes, diagnostic use, pharmacokinetics

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          Abstract

          Muscle channelopathies such as paramyotonia, hyperkalemic periodic paralysis, and potassium-aggravated myotonia are caused by gain-of-function Na+ channel mutations. Methods: Implementation of a three-dimensional radial 23Na magnetic resonance (MR) sequence with ultra-short echo times allowed the authors to quantify changes in the total muscular 23Na signal intensity. By this technique and T2-weighted 1H MRI, the authors studied whether the affected muscles take up Na+ and water during episodes of myotonic stiffness or of cold- or exercise-induced weakness. A 22% increase in the 23Na signal intensity and edema-like changes on T2-weighted 1H MR images were associated with cold-induced weakness in all 10 paramyotonia patients; signal increase and weakness disappeared within 1 day. A 10% increase in 23Na, but no increase in the T2-weighted 1H signal, occurred during cold- or exercise-induced weakness in seven hyperkalemic periodic paralysis patients, and no MR changes were observed in controls or exercise-induced stiffness in six potassium-aggravated myotonia patients. Measurements on native muscle fibers revealed provocation-induced, intracellular Na+ accumulation and membrane depolarization by -41 mV for paramyotonia, by -30 mV for hyperkalemic periodic paralysis, and by -20 mV for potassium-aggravated myotonia. The combined in vivo and in vitro approach showed a close correlation between the increase in 23Na MR signal intensity and the membrane depolarization (r = 0.92). The increase in the total 23Na signal intensity reflects intracellular changes, the cold-induced Na+ shifts are greatest and osmotically relevant in paramyotonia patients, and even osmotically irrelevant Na+ shifts can be detected by the implemented 23Na MR technique.

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