TY - JOUR
T1 - Erroneous diagnosis corrected after 28 years
T2 - Not spinal muscular atrophy with ophthalmoplegia but minicore myopathy
AU - Gordon, Paul H.
AU - Hays, Arthur P.
AU - Rowland, Lewis P.
AU - Dickoff, David J.
AU - Schotland, Donald L.
AU - Rosenberg, Roger N.
AU - Wolfe, David E.
AU - Lange, Dole J.
AU - Lovelace, Robert E.
PY - 1996/11
Y1 - 1996/11
N2 - Objective: To correct, after 28 years, the previously reported diagnosis of ophthalmoplegia in a patient with presumed childhood spinal muscular atrophy. Design: Clinical follow-up, laboratory, electrophysiologic, and muscle biopsy data are provided. Results: The findings of clinical follow-up examination, electrophysiologic tests, and histologic examination of muscle specimens led to a revised diagnosis of minicore myopathy. Conclusions: Spinal muscular atrophy was diagnosed in 1967, before histochemical techniques for examining muscle tissue and quantitative electromyography became widely available. Modern laboratory techniques later made the diagnosis of minicore myopathy possible. Progressive external ophthalmoplegia has been described in 24% of patients with minicore myopathy, but there have been only 7 reports of ophthalmoplegia with spinal muscular atrophy since 1954, and some of these diagnoses have been questioned.
AB - Objective: To correct, after 28 years, the previously reported diagnosis of ophthalmoplegia in a patient with presumed childhood spinal muscular atrophy. Design: Clinical follow-up, laboratory, electrophysiologic, and muscle biopsy data are provided. Results: The findings of clinical follow-up examination, electrophysiologic tests, and histologic examination of muscle specimens led to a revised diagnosis of minicore myopathy. Conclusions: Spinal muscular atrophy was diagnosed in 1967, before histochemical techniques for examining muscle tissue and quantitative electromyography became widely available. Modern laboratory techniques later made the diagnosis of minicore myopathy possible. Progressive external ophthalmoplegia has been described in 24% of patients with minicore myopathy, but there have been only 7 reports of ophthalmoplegia with spinal muscular atrophy since 1954, and some of these diagnoses have been questioned.
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U2 - 10.1001/archneur.1996.00550110146028
DO - 10.1001/archneur.1996.00550110146028
M3 - Article
C2 - 8912497
AN - SCOPUS:0029798106
SN - 0003-9942
VL - 53
SP - 1194
EP - 1196
JO - Archives of Neurology
JF - Archives of Neurology
IS - 11
ER -