What should I know about myasthenia gravis?*
*This myasthenia gravis section written by Charles Patrick Davis, MD, PhD
What is the medical definition of myasthenia gravis?
- Myasthenia gravis is a chronic autoimmune neuromuscular disease characterized by varying degrees of weakness of the skeletal (voluntary) muscles of the body.
- The thymus may give incorrect instructions to developing immune cells, ultimately resulting in autoimmunity and the production of the acetylcholine receptor antibodies.
What symptoms would you expect from myasthenia gravis?
- Symptoms and signs of myasthenia gravis may include:
- Problems with vision, called ocular myasthenia gravis and include:
- Eye muscle weakness
- Eyelid drooping (ptosis)
- Blurry or double vision (diplopia)
- Problems walking
- Changes in facial expressions
- Problems swallowing
- Shortness of breath
- Problems speaking
- Weakness in the arms, hands, fingers, legs, and neck
- Problems with vision, called ocular myasthenia gravis and include:
What is the cause of myasthenia gravis?
- Myasthenia gravis is caused by a defect in the transmission of nerve impulses to muscles.
- Myasthenia gravis is not directly inherited nor is it contagious.
- Commonly, the disease affects adult women (under 40) and older men (over 60), but it can occur at any age.
- Diagnosis of myasthenia gravis often is delayed because muscle weakness is a common symptom other diseases and conditions and may slowly develop.
How do you test for myasthenia gravis?
- Tests to diagnose myasthenia gravis is diagnosed with tests that help confirm the diagnosis include:
- Detecting the presence of immune molecules or acetylcholine receptor antibodies
- Edrophonium test
- Electromyography
- Myasthenia gravis is treated with medications, for example:
- The drug Soliris is approved for adult patients with generalized Myasthenia Gravis (gMG) who are anti-AchR antibody-positive.
- Anticholinesterase agents (for example, neotigmine)
- Plasmapheresis
- Various immunosuppressive drugs
- Surgical treatment may include removal of the thymus.
- A myasthenic crisis occurs when the muscles that control breathing weaken so much that you need emergency ventilation assistance to help breath.
Is myasthenia gravis life threatening?
- The disease prognosis and life expectancy is highly variable. Some people have complete remission (about 50% with thymus surgery) others have relatively normal lives with continued treatment, and others have a poor prognosis as the disease advances.
- Research is ongoing for myasthenia gravis. New treatment protocols and immunosuppressive drugs are being tried, and therapeutic methods are likely to improve in the future.
Myasthenia Gravis Test
Electromyogram (EMG)
EMGs can be used to detect abnormal electrical activity of muscle that can occur in many diseases and conditions, including muscular dystrophy, inflammation of muscles, pinched nerves, peripheral nerve damage (damage to nerves in the arms and legs), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), myasthenia gravis, disc herniation, and others.
Why is an EMG test done?
An EMG is often performed when patients have unexplained muscle weakness.
Learn more about electromyograms (EMG) »
What is myasthenia gravis?
Myasthenia gravis is a chronic autoimmune neuromuscular disease characterized by symptoms and signs of various degrees of weakness of the skeletal (voluntary) muscles of the body. The name myasthenia gravis is Latin and Greek in origin, which literally means "grave muscle weakness." With current therapies, most people with myasthenia gravis are not as "grave" as the name implies. Most people with myasthenia gravis have a normal life expectancy.
The hallmark symptom of myasthenia gravis is muscle weakness that increases during periods of activity and improves after periods of rest. Certain muscles such as those that control eye and eyelid movement, facial expression, chewing, talking, and swallowing often are, but not always, involved in the disorder. Muscles that control breathing and neck and limb movements may be affected.
The thymus gland, which lies in the chest area beneath the breastbone, plays an important role in the development of the immune system in early life. Its cells form a part of the body's normal immune system. The gland is somewhat large in infants, grows gradually until puberty, and then gets smaller and is replaced by fat with age. In adults with myasthenia gravis, the thymus gland remains large and is abnormal. It contains certain clusters of immune cells indicative of lymphoid hyperplasia is a condition which usually is found only in the spleen and lymph nodes during an active immune response. Some people with the condition develop thymomas (tumors of the thymus gland). Thymomas are generally benign, but they can become malignant (cancerous).
The relationship between the thymus gland and myasthenia gravis is not yet fully understood. Scientists believe the thymus gland may give incorrect instructions to developing immune cells, ultimately resulting in autoimmunity and the production of the acetylcholine receptor antibodies, thereby setting the stage for the attack on neuromuscular transmission.
What signs and symptoms of myasthenia gravis?
Although myasthenia gravis may affect any:
- Voluntary muscle.
- Muscles that control eye and eyelid movement
- Facial expressions.
- Swallowing problems are common.
The onset of the myasthenia gravis may be sudden so often signs and symptoms are not immediately noticed.
The first symptoms of myasthenia gravis in most people with the disease is weakness of the eye muscles while others may have signs and symptoms of swallowing problems and slurred speech.
The degree of muscle weakness involved in myasthenia gravis varies greatly among individuals, ranging from a localized form limited to eye muscles (ocular myasthenia), to a severe or generalized form in which many muscles — sometimes including those that control breathing — are affected.
Myasthenia gravis symptoms, which vary in type and severity, may include:
- One or both eyelids drooping (ptosis)
- Blurred or double vision (diplopia) due to weakness of the muscles that control eye movements
- Instablility when walking
- Changes in facial expressions
- Difficulty swallowing (dysphagia)
- Shortness of breath
- Impaired speech (dysarthria)
- Weakness in the arms, hands, fingers, legs, and neck
What is myasthenic crisis? What are the symptoms and signs? Is it life threatening?
Myasthenic crisis occurs when the muscles that control breathing weaken to the point that ventilation is inadequate that creates a medical emergency, which requires a respirator for assisted ventilation. In people whose respiratory muscles are weak, crises, which generally requires immediate medical treatment. Myasthenic crises may be triggered by an:
- Infection
- Fever
- Adverse reaction to a medication(s)
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Who gets myasthenia gravis? Is it inherited? Is it contagious?
- Myasthenia gravis occurs in all ethnic groups and both females and males. Commonly, the disease occurs in young adult women (under 40) and older men (over 60), but it can occur at any age.
- In neonatal myasthenia, the fetus may acquire immune proteins (antibodies) from a mother affected with myasthenia gravis. Generally, cases of neonatal myasthenia gravis are temporary and the child's symptoms usually disappear within 2-3 months after birth. Other children develop myasthenia gravis indistinguishable from adults. Myasthenia gravis in juveniles is uncommon.
- Myasthenia gravis is not directly inherited nor is it contagious. However, occasionally the disease may occur in more than one member of the same family.
- Rarely, children may show signs of congenital myasthenia or congenital myasthenic syndrome. These are not autoimmune disorders but are caused by defective genes that produce abnormal proteins instead of those that would normally produce acetylcholine, acetylcholinesterase (the enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine), or the acetylcholine receptor and other proteins present along the muscle membrane.
What causes myasthenia gravis?
Myasthenia gravis is caused by a defect in the transmission of nerve impulses to muscles. It occurs when normal communication between the nerve and muscle is interrupted at the neuromuscular junction — the place where nerve cells connect with the muscles they control. Normally when impulses travel down the nerve, the nerve endings release a neurotransmitter substance called acetylcholine. Acetylcholine travels from the neuromuscular junction and binds to acetylcholine receptors which are activated and generate a muscle contraction.
In myasthenia gravis, antibodies block, alter, or destroy the receptors for acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction, which prevents the muscle contraction from occurring. These antibodies are produced by the body's own immune system. Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disease because the immune system — which normally protects the body from foreign organisms — mistakenly attacks itself.
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What procedures and test diagnose myasthenia gravis?
Because weakness is a common symptom of many other disorders, diagnosing myasthenia gravis often s missed or delayed (sometimes up to two years) in people who experience mild weakness or in those whose weakness is restricted to only a few muscles.
procedures and tests to diagnose myasthenia gravis include:
- Reviewing your medical history and will perform physical and neurological examinations. The doctor will look for impairment of eye movements or muscle weakness without any changes in your ability to feel things. If the doctor suspects myasthenia gravis, several tests are available to confirm the diagnosis.
- A special blood test can detect the presence of immune molecules or acetylcholine receptor antibodies. Most people with myasthenia gravis have abnormally elevated levels of these antibodies. Recently, a second antibody — called the anti-MuSK antibody — has been found in about 30% to 40% of people with myasthenia gravis who do not have acetylcholine receptor antibodies. This antibody also can be tested for in the blood. However, neither of these antibodies is present in some people with the disease. Usually, it occurs in those with ocular myasthenia gravis.
- The edrophonium test uses IV of edrophonium chloride to very briefly relieve weakness in people with myasthenia gravis. The drug blocks the degradation (breakdown) of acetylcholine and temporarily increases the levels of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction.
- Other methods to confirm the diagnosis include a version of nerve conduction study, which tests for specific muscle "fatigue" by repetitive nerve stimulation. This test records weakening muscle responses when the nerves are repetitively stimulated by small pulses of electricity. Repetitive stimulation of a nerve during a nerve conduction study may demonstrate gradual decreases of the muscle action potential due to impaired nerve-to-muscle transmission.
- Single fiber electromyography (EMG) detects impaired nerve-to-muscle transmission and measures the electrical potential of muscle cells when single muscle fibers are stimulated by electrical impulses. Muscle fibers in myasthenia gravis, as well as other neuromuscular disorders, do not respond as well to repeated electrical stimulation compared to muscles from normal people.
- Computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the chest may be used to identify the presence of a thymoma.
- Pulmonary function testing measures breathing strength and helps to predict whether respiration may fail and lead to a myasthenic crisis.
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What is the treatment for myasthenia gravis?
Generally, myasthenia gravis can be managed. Several therapies are available that help reduce and improve muscle weakness.
Medications used for the treatment of myasthenia gravis include:
- Anticholinesterase agents, for example, neostigmine and pyridostigmine bromide (Mestinon), which help improve neuromuscular transmission and increase muscle strength.
- Immunosuppressive drugs, for example
- prednisone
- azathioprine
- Cyclosporin, mycophenolate mofetil
- tacrolimus
These medications improve muscle strength by suppressing the production of abnormal antibodies. They should be carefully monitored by your doctor because they may cause major side effects.
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What is the prognosis?
With treatment, most individuals with myasthenia can significantly improve their muscle weakness and lead normal or nearly normal lives. Some cases of myasthenia gravis may go into remission — either temporarily or permanently — and muscle weakness may disappear completely so that medications can be discontinued. Stable, long-lasting complete remissions are the goal of thymectomy and may occur in about 50 percent of individuals who undergo this procedure. In a few cases, the severe weakness of myasthenia gravis may cause respiratory failure, which requires immediate emergency medical care.
What research is being done?
Within the Federal government, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), one of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), has primary responsibility for conducting and supporting research on brain and nervous system disorders, including myasthenia gravis.
Much has been learned about myasthenia gravis in recent years. Technological advances have led to more timely and accurate diagnosis, and new and enhanced therapies have improved management of the disorder. There is a greater understanding about the structure and function of the neuromuscular junction, the fundamental aspects of the thymus gland and of autoimmunity, and the disorder itself. Despite these advances, however, there is still much to learn. Researchers are seeking to learn what causes the autoimmune response in myasthenia gravis, and to better define the relationship between the thymus gland and myasthenia gravis.
Different drugs are being tested, either alone or in combination with existing drug therapies, to see if they are effective in treating myasthenia gravis. One study is examining the use of methotrexate therapy in individuals who develop symptoms and signs of the disease while on prednisone therapy. The drug suppresses blood cell activity that causes inflammation. Another study is investigating the use of rituximab, a monoclonal antibody against B cells which make antibodies, to see if it decreases certain antibodies that cause the immune system to attack the nervous system. Investigators are also determining if eculizumab is safe and effective in treating individuals with generalized myasthenia gravis who also receive various immunosuppressant drugs.
Another study seeks further understanding of the molecular basis of synaptic transmission in the nervous system. The objective of this study is to expand current knowledge of the function of receptors and to apply this knowledge to the treatment of myasthenia gravis.
Thymectomy is also being studied in myasthenia gravis patients who do not have thymoma to assess long-term benefit the surgical procedure may have over medical therapy alone.
One study involves blood sampling to see if the immune system is making antibodies against components of the nerves and muscle. Researchers also hope to learn if these antibodies contribute to the development or worsening of myasthenia gravis and other illnesses of the nervous system.
Investigators are also examining the safety and efficacy of autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation to treat refractory and severe myasthenia gravis. Participants in this study will receive several days of treatment using the immumosuppressant drugs cyclophosphamide and antithymocyte globulin before having some of their peripheral blood cells harvested and frozen. The blood cells will later be thawed and infused intravenously into the respective individuals, whose symptoms will be monitored for five years.
Where can I get more information?
For more information on neurological disorders or research programs funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, contact the Institute's Brain Resources and Information Network (BRAIN) at:
BRAIN
P.O. Box 5801
Bethesda, MD 20824
(800) 352-9424
http://www.ninds.nih.gov
Information also is available from the following organizations:
Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America, Inc.
355 Lexington Avenue
15th Floor
New York, NY 10017-6603
[email protected]
http://www.myasthenia.org
Tel: 800-541-5454 212-297-2156
Fax: 212-370-9047
Muscular Dystrophy Association
National Office — 222 S. Riverside Plaza
Suite 1500
Chicago, IL 60606
[email protected]
http://www.mda.org
Tel: 800-572-1717
Fax: 520-529-5300
American Autoimmune Related Diseases Association
22100 Gratiot Avenue
Eastpointe, MI 48021-2227
[email protected]
http://www.aarda.org
Tel: 586-776-3900 800-598-4668
Fax: 586-776-3903