Muscle & nerve
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Comparative Study
Complex fasciculations and their origin in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and Kennedy's disease.
Complex fasciculations are common in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Combined fasciculations, defined as a complex fasciculation consisting of two or more components that occur independently but also in combination with another component, also occur in ALS. To test the hypothesis that combined fasciculations originate at the supraspinal level, we analyzed 2681 fasciculation potentials from 17 patients with definite or probable ALS by the El Escorial criteria. ⋯ In ALS, the mean combination ratio (the number of times that a combined fasciculation occurred divided by the total number of fasciculations) was 4.6 +/- 8.3% (range 0-33). Fourteen of 17 ALS patients had combined fasciculations, but only one combined fasciculation was found in a patient with Kennedy's disease. Combined fasciculations are distinctive in ALS, and we hypothesize that they are triggered by a supraspinal mechanism reflecting dysfunction of descending motor pathways.
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Review Comparative Study
Clinical and genetic heterogeneity in myotonic dystrophies.
This review of myotonic dystrophies primarily concentrates on the clinical and genetic findings that can distinguish a novel form of myotonic dystrophy, myotonic dystrophy type 2 (DM2); proximal myotonic myopathy (PROMM); and proximal myotonic dystrophy (PDM) from myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1). The multisystemic nature of these disorders leads to a spectrum of symptoms and signs. ⋯ Genetic linkage analyses show that myotonic dystrophies can be divided into three types: the conventional Steinert type linked to chromosome 19q13.3 (DM1); DM2/PROMM and PDM linked to chromosome 3q21.3; and families not linked to either chromosomal site. Although the diagnosis may be clinically suspected, it depends on DNA analysis.