Spinal muscular atrophy
14,248views

00:00 / 00:00
Assessments
Flashcards
0 / 6 complete
USMLE® Step 1 questions
0 / 1 complete
Flashcards
Spinal muscular atrophy
0 of 6 complete
Questions
USMLE® Step 1 style questions USMLE
0 of 1 complete
External References
First Aid
2024
2023
2022
2021
Autosomal recessive disease
spinal muscular atrophy p. 544
Transcript
Content Reviewers
Contributors
Spinal muscular atrophy, or SMA, is a genetic disorder where nerve cells in the spinal cord die prematurely, and this causes the muscles that would normally be controlled by those nerves to atrophy, or wither away, which causes weakness.
When the brain wants a muscle to contract, it sends a signal through an upper motor neuron, which takes the impulse from the brain to the spinal cord, and then through a lower motor neuron, which goes from the spinal cord to the neuromuscular junction, which is where the lower motor neuron touches the muscle cell.
The lower motor neurons which cause voluntary contraction of skeletal muscle are called alpha motor neurons, and these alpha motor neurons are the ones that die in SMA. Their cell bodies are located in the anterior horn, or front part, of the spinal cord, and their axons project from the spinal cord all the way to the muscles they innervate. A group of these neurons is called a motor nerve.
If a lower motor neuron dies or if the entire nerve is injured, the motor unit, which includes the neuron and the muscle fibers it innervates, stops working.
Depending on how many muscle fibers stop contracting, there can be overall muscle weakness or in an extreme situation, a flaccid, or low-tone paralysis.
This denervated muscle also atrophies over time, a classic example of “use it or lose it”. This contrasts with the increased muscle tone and spasticity that develops after an upper motor neuron is damaged.
When a lot of these muscle fibers are affected, fasciculations can happen which are, spontaneous, involuntary muscle contractions.
Alpha motor neurons also carry the signal for muscle contraction in deep tendon reflexes, like the knee-jerk reflex, and they diminish or disappear when alpha motor neurons are damaged.
Now, it turns out that there are a few types and subtypes of SMA.
Type 1a, congenital SMA, is the most severe of all and it starts even before birth, when mothers may notice decreased fetal movements.
SMA type Ib, also called infantile SMA or Werdnig-Hoffman disease, is the classic form where babies often appear normal at birth and then in the first few weeks of life develop hypotonia or low muscle tone.
These infants have progressive weakness, which is worse proximally than distally, and is initially more obvious in the legs, making it hard for them to do things like sit up.
They can also have weakness in the muscles involved in sucking, chewing, and swallowing and as a result, they can have difficulty taking milk, eating foods, or even safely swallowing their own secretions which can lead to aspiration.
The weakness can also affect the chest wall muscles and diaphragm leading to breathing difficulty and eventually respiratory failure.
For these reasons, most of these babies survive only a few years.
SMA types II, III, and IV are each successively milder and have a later age of onset.
In addition to muscle weakness, feeding problems, and breathing difficulties, chronic symptoms of SMA include scoliosis due to poor muscle support of the spine and extremely thin limbs due to muscle wasting.
Summary
Spinal muscular atrophy or SMA is an autosomal recessive disorder where a deletion of the SMN1 gene causes alpha-motor neurons in the spinal cord to die, resulting in muscle weakness, atrophy, respiratory failure, and death in extreme cases. Treatment for SMA is supportive, like giving nutrition through a feeding tube as well as respiratory support to help with muscle stiffness and strengthen respiratory muscles.