Motor Neuron Diseases - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Motor Neuron Diseases

Description:

Motor Neuron Diseases Motor Neuron Diseases group of diseases which include progressive degeneration and loss of motor neurons with or without similar lesion of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:3163
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 51
Provided by: phdresCar
Category:
Tags: diseases | motor | neuron

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Motor Neuron Diseases


1
Motor Neuron Diseases
2
  • Motor Neuron Diseases
  • group of diseases which include progressive
    degeneration and loss of motor neurons with or
    without similar lesion of the motor nuclei of the
    brain
  • replacement of lost cells with gliosis
  • Motor Neuron Disease ALS (Charcots Disease,
    Lou Gehrigs Disease)
  • LMN - limbs (PMA), bulbar (progressive bulbar
    palsy)
  • UMN limbs (PLS), bulbar (progressive
    pseudobulbar palsy)

3
Diagnostic Triad ALS
Progression
4
ALS Demographics
  • Incidence 2 per 100,000
  • Male slightly gt Female
  • Peak age of onset 6th decade (range 20 to 90)
  • No racial predilection
  • 95 sporadic
  • 5 AD (FALS)

5
ALS Diagnosis Upper MotorNeuron Symptoms
  • Loss of dexterity
  • Slowed movements
  • Loss of muscle strength
  • Stiffness
  • Emotional lability

6
ALS Diagnosis Upper Motor Neuron Signs
Bulbar Jaw jerk Snout Palmomental Pseudobulbar
palsy/ affect Glabellar
Cervical Pathologic DTRs Hoffmans Spasticity
Thoracic Loss of abdominal reflexes
Lumbosacral Pathologic DTRs, Extensor plantar
signs, Spasticity
7
ALS Diagnosis Lower Motor Neuron Symptoms
  • Loss of muscle strength
  • Atrophy
  • Fasciculations
  • Muscle cramps

8
(No Transcript)
9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
ALS Inconsistent Clinical Features
  • Sensory dysfunction
  • Bladder and bowel sphincter dysfunction
  • Autonomic nervous system dysfunction
  • Visual pathway abnormalities
  • Movement disorders
  • Cognitive abnormalities
  • Bedsores

12
Pathology
  • Precentral gyrus atrophy
  • Sparing of nucleus of Onuf
  • Neuronal loss of cranial nuclei
  • Degeneration of corticospinal tract
  • Chromatin dissolution (chromatolysis), atrophy,
    shrinkage, cell loss, gliosis

13
Pathology
  • Buninas bodies intracytoplasmic, easinophilic
    dense granular
  • Hiranos bodies rod shaped, contain parallel
    filaments
  • Lewy bodies
  • Neuritic plaques
  • Neurofibrillary tangles

14
Familial ALS
  • AD inheritance, variable penetrance
  • Male Female
  • Higher incidence of cognitive changes
  • Chorea
  • Younger onset
  • Reported spongiform changes, plaques, tangles
  • 15 year survival
  • One type maps to chromosome 2
  • 20 are SOD

15
ALS Differential Diagnosis
  • Toxins (lead, mercury, ?aluminum)
  • Metabolic (hyperthyroidism, hyperparathyroidism,
    hypoglycemia)
  • Enzyme deficiency (Hexosaminidase A)
  • Paraneoplastic (lymphoma, small cell lung)
  • Cervical spondylosis

16
ALS Differential Diagnosis
  • Immunologic (paraproteinemia)
  • Multi-system degeneration (Creutzfeldt-Jacob,
    ALS-PD-Dementia, Spinocerebellar Degeneration)
  • Viral (Post-polio)
  • Bacterial (Lyme disease)
  • Vitamin B12 deficiency

17
ALS Laboratory Studies
  • CK levels are typically normal but may be
    increased 2-3x normal in almost half of
    patients.
  • CSF may show mild protein elevation (less than
    100mg/dl).
  • All other laboratory studies should be normal.

18
ALS Electrodiagnostic Testing
  • Normal SNAPs
  • CMAPs may be normal or show decreased amplitude
  • NCV rarely lt 80 LLN
  • DL rarely gt 1.5x normal
  • F response rarely gt 1.3x normal
  • Fibrillations/fasciculations in 2 muscles in 3
    extremities (head and paraspinals count as an
    extremity)

19
ALS Prognosis
  • Prognosis
  • 50 dead in 3 years
  • 20 live 5 years
  • 10 live 10 years
  • Worse prognosis if
  • Bulbar onset
  • Simultaneous arm/leg onset
  • Older age at diagnosis (onset lt 40 8.2 yr
    duration, onset 61-70 2.6 yr duration)

20
Anatomical Variants
21
Primary Lateral Sclerosis
  • Upper motor neuron syndrome
  • Rare disorder (2 of MND cases) with survival
    ranging between years - decades
  • Weakness is typically distal, asymmetrical
  • Patients present with slowly progressive spastic
    paralysis/bulbar palsy
  • EMG should not reveal evidence of active or
    chronic denervation

22
Primary Lateral Sclerosis
  • Patients may develop clinical LMN abnormalities
    over the course of their disease.
  • Frequently, patients may have subtle evidence of
    active or chronic denervation on EMG (rare
    fibs/decreased recruitment), and/or muscle biopsy
    at diagnosis

23
Progressive Muscular Atrophy
  • Lower motor neuron syndrome
  • Literature suggests 8-10 of patients with MND
  • Much better prognosis than ALS (mean duration
    3-14 years)
  • Bulbar involvement is rare
  • Weakness is typically distal, asymmetrical

24
Lower Motor Neuron Syndromes
  • Hexosaminidase A deficiency
  • Spinal muscular atrophy
  • Post-polio syndrome
  • Polymyositis
  • Inclusion body myositis
  • LMN onset ALS
  • PMA
  • Multi-focal motor neuropathy
  • Mononeuropathy multiplex
  • CIDP
  • Polyneuropathy/
  • radiculopathy
  • Plexopathy
  • Kennedys

25
Progressive Muscular Atrophy
  • The majority of patients presenting with PMA
    eventually develop clinical UMN signs.
  • Post-mortem examinations of PMA patients
    frequently show pathologic evidence of UMN
    degeneration.
  • In some FALS families, the same gene mutation
    causes the phenotypes of PMA and ALS in different
    individuals.

26
Spinobulbar Muscular Atrophy
  • Originally reported by Kennedy in 1966 11 males
    in 2 families
  • Age of onset
  • Usually begins in 3rd or 4th decade
  • Genetics
  • Most common form of adult onset SMA
  • X-linked recessive
  • gt40 CAG repeats in the androgen receptor gene
  • Number of repeats correlates with age of onset

27
Spinobulbar Muscular Atrophy
  • Lower motor neuron syndrome with limb-girdle
    distribution of weakness/bulbar palsy
  • Facial or perioral fasciculations (90)
  • Tongue atrophy with longitudinal midline
    furrowing
  • Prominent muscle cramps
  • Generalized fasciculations and atrophy
  • Rarely causes respiratory muscle weakness

28
(No Transcript)
29
Spinobulbar Muscular Atrophy
  • Reflexes are decreased or absent
  • Cognitive impairment may occur
  • Hand tremor
  • Sensory exam may be normal or minimally abnormal

30
Spinobulbar Muscular AtrophySystemic
Manifestations
  • Gynecomastia (60-90)
  • Testicular atrophy (40)
  • Feminization
  • Impotence
  • Infertility
  • Diabetes (10-20)

31
Spinobulbar Muscular AtrophyLaboratory Studies
  • Markedly abnormal sensory NCS
  • Sural nerve bx significant loss of myelinated
    fibers
  • Elevated CK (may be 10x normal)
  • Abnormal sex hormone levels (androgen nl or
    decreased estrogen may be elevated, FSH/LH may
    be mildly elevated)
  • Increased expansion of CAG repeats in the
    androgen receptor gene

32
Conclusions
  • Although some patients with MND variants evolve
    into classic ALS over time, others continue to
    show restricted clinical features even late in
    the course of their disease.
  • In daily clinical practice, precise definitions
    may not be crucial but recognition of the
    variants is important since each has a
    different course and prognosis.
  • The treatment cocktail should be the same until
    we learn more about pathogenesis.

33
Treatment Issues to Consider
  • Symptom management
  • Nutritional management
  • Respiratory management
  • Palliative care
  • Therapies to slow disease progression

34
Symptoms Associated with Motor Neuron Disease
  • Dysarthria
  • Dysphagia
  • Sialorrhea
  • Emotional lability
  • Depression
  • Weight Loss
  • Bladder urgency
  • Sleep dysfunction
  • Constipation
  • Edema
  • Pain
  • Spasticity
  • Cramps
  • Weight loss
  • Fatigue
  • Weakness

35
Sialorrhea
  • Symptoms result from inability to clear
    oropharyngeal secretions
  • Common pharmacologic treatments
  • Glycopyrrolate (Robinul) 1-2 mg q 4h
  • Amitriptyline (Elavil) 25-100 mg qhs
  • Hyoscyamine sulfate (Levsin) 1-2 tsp q 4h
  • Transdermal scopolamine
  • Suction machines

36
Management of Emotional Lability
  • Common pharmacologic treatments
  • Amitriptyline (Elavil) 25-150 mg qhs
  • SSRIs
  • Common nonpharmacologic treatments
  • Counseling/support groups

37
Spasticity
  • Common pharmacologic treatments
  • Baclofen (Lioresal) 10-40 mg TID-QID
  • Dantrolene sodium (Dantrium) 25 mg qd - QID
  • Tizanidine HCL (Zanaflex) 12-36 mg TID
  • Diazepam (Valium) 2-5mg TID
  • Botox ?
  • Common nonpharmacologic treatments
  • Physical therapy
  • Occupational therapy

38
Management of WeaknessAssistive Devices
  • Cane
  • Roll-aided walker
  • AFOs
  • Wheelchair
  • Hoyer lift
  • Cervical collar
  • Hospital bed
  • Ramps
  • Built-up utensils
  • Velcro fasteners
  • Raised toilet seat
  • Shower chair
  • Resting hand splints
  • Grab bars

39
Management of Dysphagia Consideration for PEG
  • Consider
  • Significant weight loss
  • Inadequate fluid or caloric intake
  • Difficulty swallowing medications
  • Frequent choking during meals
  • Prolonged meal times
  • FVC lt 50
  • Aspiration pneumonia
  • Does not prolong survival
  • Malnutrition independent risk factor for worse
    prognosis

40
Respiratory Insufficiency Early Symptoms
  • Dyspnea on exertion
  • Supine dyspnea
  • Marked fatigue
  • Excessive daytime somnolence
  • Frequent nocturnal arousals
  • Vivid dreams
  • Morning headaches

41
Management of Respiratory Muscle Weakness
  • Consider initiation of support when
  • Symptoms of nocturnal hypoventilation
  • FVC lt50 of predicted
  • MIP lt -60 cm H2O
  • Evidence of significant O2 desaturations
  • May prolong time to death/trach in longitudinal
    studies

42
(No Transcript)
43
Pathogenesis
  • Nucleic acid metabolism decreased nucleolus
    staining, reduced mRNA/rRNA content
  • Glutamate activation NMDA type receptor, Ca
    influx, free radical production (NO/ROS/protein
    misfolding by endoplasmic reticulum)
  • Increased in CSF and plasma
  • Decreased in brain and spinal cord
  • Decreased active transport of glutamate into
    synaptosomes
  • Loss of glial glutamate transporters

44
Pathogenesis
  • Loss of muscarinic cholinergic repectors of
    anterior horns
  • Decreased choline acetyltransferase in spinal
    cord
  • Decreased glycine and BZD receptors
  • Immunology
  • CSF IgG ? Elevated in spinal cord
  • C3, C4 deposits in spinal cord
  • Reported abnormal glycolipid antibodies in serum
  • Elevated antibodies to voltage gated calcium
    channels disturbance of calcium homeostasis
    (binding proteins parvalbumin/calbindinD28)

45
Pathogenesis
  • Viral? amantadine not effective
  • SOD1 loss of function mutation?
  • 20 of FALS
  • Free radical toxicity
  • Chromosome 21
  • Cytosolic enzyme
  • Transgenic mouse model

46
Pathogenesis
  • Heat shock proteins chaperones, influence
    shape, shuttle proteins
  • Apoptosis programmed cell death
  • CNS glial cells retain some reproductive
    capacity
  • Microglial specialized macrophages
  • Macroglia astrocytes, oligodendrocytes,
    ependymal cells, radial glial (neurogenesis/migrat
    ion)

47
Treatment
  • Riluzole
  • IGF-1 - growth factor
  • Ceftriaxone glutamate transporter
  • Co-Q10
  • Statins
  • Memantine with riluzole

48
Treatment
  • Tamoxifen with riluzole
  • Celebrex
  • Thalidomide - TNF alpha
  • Buspirone neurotrophic effect
  • Stem cell

49
Western Pacific ALS
  • ALS-PD-Dementia Guam, West New Guinea, Honshu
    Island
  • Earlier onset
  • UMN precedes LMN features
  • Bulbar weakness more common

50
Hexosaminidase A Deficiency
  • AR
  • Onset childhood
  • SMA-like picture
  • Mild dementia, neuropathy, ataxia, psychosis
  • Atrophy on imaging (cerebellum)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com