| Literature DB >> 34104586 |
Mohammed S Albassam1, Salman A Thabet1, Mohammed Hmoud2,3, Seraj Makkawi1,4,2.
Abstract
The concomitance between Parkinson's disease (PD) and myasthenia gravis (MG) is rare, with only a few case reports in the literature and only one of them with positive anti-muscle specific kinase (anti-MuSK) MG. The overlap between PD and MG symptoms can cause a diagnostic dilemma for the treating physician. In this report, we present a 73-year-old lady with a history of recurrent falls, dysphagia, and diplopia. She was found to have ptosis, vertical gaze restriction, neck extension, and flexion weakness, as well as features of parkinsonism, including masked face appearance, asymmetrical limbs rigidity, and bradykinesia. She was found to have a high titer antibody for MuSK MG. Her MG symptoms were treated successfully with rituximab.Entities:
Keywords: adult neurology; anti-musk; myasthenia gravis (mg); parkinson' s disease; rituximab; saudi arabia
Year: 2021 PMID: 34104586 PMCID: PMC8174120 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.14839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Brain MRI showing extensive chronic microangiopathic changes
(A) Axial and (B) sagittal views of the brain (fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequence) showing confluent T2 high signal intensity involving the periventricular, deep and subcortical white matter, suggestive of extensive chronic microangiopathy.
Distinguishing clinical features of myasthenia gravis and Parkinson’s disease
| Clinical features | Myasthenia Gravis | Parkinson’s Disease |
| Face | Facial diplegia | Masked face |
| Eye movement | Fatigable ophthalmoplegia | Vertical gaze palsy in progressive supranuclear palsy |
| Eyelid | Fatigable ptosis | Reduced blink rate |
| Swallowing | Fatigable dysphagia | Progressive dysphagia |
| Speech | Nasal speech | Soft and monotonic speech |
| Neck | Neck flexion/extension weakness | Neck rigidity in progressive supranuclear palsy |
| Limbs | Fatigable weakness | Rigidity, bradykinesia, and tremor |