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Laboratory diagnosis of metabolic myopathies

Authors :
Georgirene D. Vladutiu
Source :
Muscle & Nerve. 25:649-663
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Wiley, 2002.

Abstract

The metabolic myopathies are a heterogeneous group of disorders inherited by a variety of modes that include gene defects in both the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes. Many factors impact on the expression of the pathogenic mutations that cause these disorders including genetic background, environmental factors, and coexisting disorders. Molecular technology has greatly improved the ability to make definitive diagnoses in many of the metabolic myopathies in the last decade and particularly has demonstrated that the wide diversity in the severity of mutations contributes to understanding genotype-phenotype correlations. In some cases, molecular testing obviates the necessity to perform an invasive muscle biopsy. However, it is also clear that the diagnostic yield from molecular testing is incomplete and particularly low among the mitochondrial myopathies as a group, ranging from approximately 6% to 19% in well-classified high-risk groups. Therefore, it is often essential to combine clinical, biochemical, histopathologic, and molecular data for each patient in order to arrive at a definitive diagnosis. The approach to the laboratory diagnosis of metabolic myopathies is described emphasizing both noninvasive and invasive testing, highlighting the molecular methodologies with the benefits and disadvantages of each technology, and documenting how to determine whether patients have coexisting disorders.

Details

ISSN :
10974598 and 0148639X
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Muscle & Nerve
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....203e21252baa6a39721973d67c269f25
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/mus.10104