Help with Nervous System Injuries and Disorders - Anatomy

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Question

A 27-year old male comes to a clinic complaining that he has difficulty climbing stairs and getting up from a sitting position. He recently recovered from a bout of diarrhea and then noticed that his feet were weak and that he was having trouble walking. What is responsible for this man’s condition?

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Answer

This man is suffering from acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (AIDP), also known as Guillain-Barre Syndrome. As suggested by the name, the pathology is due to demyelination.

AIDP is a symmetric ascending paralysis that begins in the feet and ascends to the trunk and upper extremities. The paralysis will often impair breathing and frequently affects the facial nerve as well. This disease commonly follows an illness, especially infectious diarrhea caused by Campylobacter jejuni. The immune response to foreign antigens mistakenly targets host nerve tissues, specifically the myelin sheaths.

Inhibition of ACh release into synaptic cleft can also result in weakness, but describes the effects of botulinum toxin in botulism. The toxin is made by the bacteria Clostridium botulinum as a foodborne illness. Patients experience weakness, trouble seeing, fatigue, and possible speech difficulties. Muscular weakness may follow. Diagnosis is made by identifying the toxin in food or feces.

Blockade of action potentials is seen in conduction blockages as a result of nerve injury, such as neuropraxia, axonotmesis, or neurotmesis.

Blockade of presynaptic voltage-gated calcium channels describes Lambert-Eaton Syndrome, a presynaptic neuromuscular junction disorder characterized by muscular weakness of the limbs. It is an autoimmune condition that attacks presynaptic voltage-gated calcium channels. Proximal muscles are affected first, so patients have difficulty climbing stairs or standing up from sitting. They also may have difficulty reaching over their head or combing their hair. Diagnosis is made by EMG, which shows normal latency and conduction velocities, but small amplitudes. Rapid bursts of stimuli or exercising the muscle will lead to greatly increased amplitudes due to an influx of calcium.

Blockade of postsynaptic ACh receptors is seen in myasthenia gravis, a postsynaptic neuromuscular junction disorder very similar to Lambert-Eaton Syndrome. It is an autoimmune disorder directed against postsynaptic acetylcholine receptors and is characterized by easy fatigue. Muscles become progressively weaker with activity, so patients tend to have symptoms at the end of the day. Earliest signs include difficulty keeping the eyes open, or difficulty with chewing, speaking, or swallowing. EMG studies will show progressively decreasing amplitudes with repeated stimuli.

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