4.4 Article

Single-fiber electromyography of masseter muscle in myasthenia gravis

Journal

MUSCLE & NERVE
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 522-525

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mus.20921

Keywords

end plate jitter; masseter muscle; myasthenia gravis; neuromuscular transmission disorders; single-fiber electromyography

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Jitter after axonal microstimulation in the masseter muscle was studied in 30 consecutive patients (12 women) with myasthenia gravis (MG). Patients' mean age was 42.3 (12-75), median disease duration was 3 months (1-72), and onset was ocular (15 cases), oculobulbar (7), bulbar (6), or generalized (2). There were 23 newly-diagnosed patients. Nine cases developed purely ocular MG and 21 cases developed generalized MG. In the latter group, five subjects had a rapidly progressive course and 16 subjects had stable or well-controlled disease (MGFA grade 2-3). Six patients did not have circulating anti-acetylcholine receptor antibodies. Masseter single-fiber electromyography (SFEMG) was abnormal in 6 of 9 ocular MG patients and in all generalized cases (overall sensitivity 27 of 30 cases or 90%; confidence interval 79.3%-100.0% at P = 0.95). Masseter should be considered for SFEMG in diagnosis of MG, especially in cases with bulbar onset.

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