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Temperature-sensitive repetitive discharges in paramyotonia congenita

✍ Scribed by Michael D. Weiss; Richard F. Mayer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
43 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-639X

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✦ Synopsis


A 47-year-old female with paramyotonia congenita was studied with electromyography and showed minimal myotonic discharges but prominent repetitive discharges in hand muscles at room temperature. With cooling the hand, the repetitive discharges ceased as the myotonic potentials became prominent. With exercise and further cooling, the myotonic discharges increased and the strength of the muscle and recruitment pattern decreased. With warming, the myotonic discharges decreased as the repetitive discharges reappeared. This is the first report of repetitive discharges occurring in a patient with temperature-sensitive sodium channel myotonia. It is postulated that the repetitive discharges as well as the myotonic discharges are the manifestation of muscle membrane hyperexcitability secondary to the abnormal, noninactivating sodium channels.


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✍ Margaret S. Dice; Jennifer L. Abbruzzese; James T. Wheeler; James R. Groome; Est 📂 Article 📅 2004 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 196 KB

## Abstract The biophysical origins of paramyotonia congenita and its exacerbation in cold temperatures were examined. Human skeletal muscle voltage‐gated sodium channels were expressed in __Xenopus__ oocytes and macroscopic currents were recorded from cell‐attached patches. Wild‐type (hNa~V~1.4) c