Annals of neurology
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Annals of neurology · Oct 1996
Acute myopathy of intensive care: clinical, electromyographic, and pathological aspects.
An acute myopathy of intensive care occurs in critically ill patients treated with intravenous corticosteroids and neuromuscular junction-blocking agents. The full clinicopathological spectrum is uncertain. We evaluated the clinical, electrodiagnostic, and histopathological features of 14 patients who developed acute myopathy of intensive care after organ transplantation or during treatment of severe pulmonary disorders and sepsis. ⋯ Loss of thick filaments was identified in muscle biopsy specimens obtained 30 +/- 11 days (mean +/- standard deviation) after intravenous corticosteroid treatment but not in those obtained earlier (12 +/- 2 days). Critically ill patients, including those receiving organ transplants, may develop acute myopathy of intensive care after exposure to intravenous corticosteroids and neuromuscular junction-blocking agents, although the exposure to the latter drugs may be minimal. Selective loss of thick filaments is common in acute myopathy of intensive care, especially if the muscle biopsy specimen is obtained 2 weeks or more after intravenous corticosteroid exposure.