Myasthenia gravis: Year of the Zebra 2024

Myasthenia gravis: Year of the Zebra 2024

TERM 2 - NB2

TERM 2 - NB2

Syringomyelia
Anatomy clinical correlates: Spinal cord pathways
Spinal cord disorders: Pathology review
Syringomyelia: Year of the Zebra
Anatomy of the brainstem
Anatomy of the diencephalon
Anatomy of the limbic system
Anatomy of the white matter tracts
Anatomy clinical correlates: Cerebellum and brainstem
Cranial nerve pathways
Anatomy of the ascending spinal cord pathways
Anatomy of the descending spinal cord pathways
Anatomy clinical correlates: Vertebral canal
Anatomy of the basal ganglia
Anatomy of the ventricular system
Spina bifida
Movement disorders: Pathology review
Ascending and descending spinal tracts
Pyramidal and extrapyramidal tracts
Somatosensory pathways
Somatosensory receptors
Brown-Séquard syndrome: Year of the Zebra
Brown-Sequard Syndrome
Muscle spindles and golgi tendon organs
Central nervous system histology
Spinal infection and abscess: Clinical sciences
Spinal muscular atrophy
Skin histology
Neurocutaneous disorders: Pathology review
Approach to differentiating lesions (motor neuron): Clinical sciences
Approach to differentiating lesions (nerve root, plexus, and peripheral nerve): Clinical sciences
Approach to weakness (focal and generalized): Clinical sciences
Neuromuscular junction disorders: Pathology review
Approach to differentiating lesions (neuromuscular junction): Clinical sciences
Neuromuscular junction and motor unit
Myasthenia gravis: Clinical sciences
Neuromuscular blockers
Corynebacterium diphtheriae (Diphtheria)
Poliovirus
Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome
Myasthenia gravis
Myasthenia gravis: Year of the Zebra 2024
Inflammatory myopathies: Clinical sciences
Basal ganglia: Direct and indirect pathway of movement
Parkinson disease
Anatomy clinical correlates: Cerebral hemispheres
Anatomy of the cerebellum
Cerebellum
Eye conditions: Retinal disorders: Pathology review
Coats disease: Year of the Zebra 2024
Eye conditions: Refractive errors, lens disorders and glaucoma: Pathology review
Photoreception
Approach to acute vision loss: Clinical sciences
Optic pathways and visual fields
Vestibular transduction
Auditory transduction and pathways
Kluver-Bucy syndrome
Childhood and early-onset psychological disorders: Pathology review
Approach to neurodevelopmental disorders: Clinical sciences
Approach to diplopia: Clinical sciences

Transcript

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Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disorder that causes weakness in skeletal muscles. It occurs when the body mistakenly produces antibodies that attack the neuromuscular junction, which is the meeting point between nerve endings and muscle fibers.

Typically, when the brain sends a signal to move a muscle, it travels down motor nerves until it reaches the neuromuscular junction. At this junction, nerve cells release a chemical messenger called acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter which crosses a small gap and binds to receptors on the surface of muscle cells, triggering muscle contraction.

With myasthenia gravis, antibodies bind to these receptors, blocking their interaction with acetylcholine and weakening muscle contraction. Over time, these antibodies can damage and reduce the amount of receptors on the muscle cell surface, further leading to weak and easily fatigued muscles.

Although it is unclear why, myasthenia gravis tends to affect young females in their twenties and thirties and older males in their sixties and seventies. It is also more common in people who have a thymoma, which is a type of tumor that develops in the thymus gland.

The hallmark symptom of myasthenia gravis is muscle weakness that worsens after activity and improves with rest. Initially, myasthenia gravis may only affect the muscles that control movement of the eye and eyelids, causing symptoms like double vision or drooping eyelids. When the arm and leg muscles are involved, people might experience severe fatigue and difficulties with walking or climbing stairs. Weakness in the muscles responsible for swallowing and speech production can cause symptoms like a change in voice and slurred speech, as well as difficulty swallowing.

Sources

  1. "Myasthenic crisis" Muscle Nerve (2023)
  2. "The use of the ice pack test in myasthenia gravis" JRSM Short Rep (2010)
  3. "Myasthenia gravis" Nat Rev Dis Primers (2019)
  4. "Myasthenia gravis" N Engl J Med (2016)