| Literature DB >> 30787905 |
Maria-Letizia Campanari1,2, Annis-Rayan Bourefis1,2, Edor Kabashi1,2.
Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) represents the major adult-onset motor neuron disease. Both human and animal studies reveal the critical implication of muscle and neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) in the initial phase of this disease. Despite the common efforts, ALS diagnosis remains particularly challenging since many other disorders can overlap yielding similar clinical phenotypic features. A combination of further research on the NMJ parameters that are specific for this disease and laboratory tests are crucial for the early determination of specific changes in the muscle, as well as in motor neuron and the prediction of ALS progression. Also, it could provide a powerful tool in the discrimination of particular ALS and ALS-mimic cases and increase the efficacy of therapeutic treatments.Entities:
Keywords: ALS-mimic diseases; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS); axonopathy; dying back hypothesis; neuromuscular junction (NMJ)
Year: 2019 PMID: 30787905 PMCID: PMC6372519 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
General overview of neuromuscular diseases and ALS-mimic pathologies.
| Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) | ||
| Primary Lateral Scerosis (PLS) | ||
| Progressive Muscular Atrophy (PMA) | ||
| Progressive Bulbar Palsy (PBP) | ||
| Mithochondrial Disorder (MID) | ||
| Psedobulbar Palsy | ||
| Spinal Muscular atrophy (SMA) | ||
| Primary lateral sclerosis (some subtupes not related to ALS) | ||
| Progressive spinal muscular atrophy (some subtype not related to ALS) | ||
| Spinobulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA or Kennedy's disease) | ||
| Autoimmune Syndromes Monoclonal | ||
| Myopathies | ||
| Cachectic myopathy | ||
| Polymyositis Sarcoid myositis | ||
| Carcinoid myopathy | ||
| Nemaline myopathy | ||
| Inflammatory myopathies | Polymyositis (PM) | |
| Dermatomyositis | ||
| Inclusion-body myositis (IBM) | ||
Neuromuscular Disorders (NMD) implicate deficits and degeneration of nerves (motor and sensory neurons) and muscles (skeletal muscles) of the central and peripheral nervous system, leading to muscles weaken and waste away (atrophy). NMDs are classified in 4 categories, with Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis representing the main one. ALS-mimic pathologies is a vast group of diseases characterized by weakness and wasting away of muscle tissue, with or without the breakdown of nerve tissue, thus mimicking ALS symptoms. Currently, no cure exists for NMDs and the treatments aim to relieve the symptoms and delay disease progression.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the nerve conduction and muscle contraction studies. Nerve Conduction Velocity (NCV - left) measures the velocity and the quality of conduction of the electrical signal in a nerve. During the test, your nerve is stimulated, with an electrode attached to your skin. One or two more electrodes patches are placed on the skin over your nerve. The electrical impulse of the stimulated nerve pass from the stimulator to the other receiving electrode. The time (in milliseconds) spent by the impulse to move from a point to another, on the order of millimeters, represent the Velocity. In ALS, the impulse conduction is slower respect with control cases and is worsened by the increase of axonal degeneration. The electromyogram (EMG-right) measures the electrical activity of the muscles at rest and during contraction. There are two kinds of EMG: surface EMG and intramuscular EMG. In the first one the muscle activity is recorded by one or more electrodes patched on the skin and it asses the contractile response of superficial muscles. This approach presents several limitation since the result signal is influenced by the depth of the subcutaneous tissue at the site of the recording and by the discharges of adjacent muscles. With the intramuscular EMG, specific deep muscle activity is recorded by using one needle electrode inserted into the muscle. EMG and NCV tests are often done together to give more complete information.