Tissue Doppler ultrasound of arm muscles to assess myotonia in myotonic dystrophies: An exploratory study

Author:

Svačina Martin K. R.1ORCID,Sprenger‐Svačina Alina1ORCID,Kohle Felix1ORCID,Wunderlich Gilbert12ORCID,Lehmann Helmar C.3,Schneider Christian14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital of Cologne Cologne Germany

2. Center for Rare Diseases Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital of Cologne Cologne Germany

3. Department of Neurology Klinikum Leverkusen Leverkusen Germany

4. Department of Neurology St. Katharinen Hospital Frechen Germany

Abstract

AbstractIntroduction/AimsMyotonia is a key symptom of myotonic dystrophies (DM), and its quantification is challenging. This exploratory study evaluated the utility of tissue Doppler ultrasound (TDU) to assess myotonia in DM.MethodsTwelve DM patients (seven type‐1 DM [DM1] and five type‐2 DM [DM2]) and 20 age‐matched healthy subjects were included in this cross‐sectional study. After measuring cross‐sectional areas of the flexor digitorum superficialis (FDS) and extensor digitorum communis (EDC) muscles in a resting state, muscle contraction/relaxation time, time to peak tissue velocity, peak tissue velocity and velocity gradients of these muscles were measured via TDU while performing forced fist unclenching after fist closure. Additionally, grip strength, Medical Research Council Sum score and patient‐reported myotonia severity scores were assessed.ResultsDM1 and DM2 patients had a lower grip strength than healthy subjects (p = .0001/p = .002). Patient‐reported myotonia did not differ between DM1 and DM2 patients. DM1 patients revealed FDS and EDC atrophy compared to DM2 patients and healthy subjects (p = .003/p = .004). TDU revealed prolonged muscle contraction and relaxation times in both DM subtypes, with prolonged time to reach FDS peak relaxation velocity and altered peak FDS relaxation velocity only in DM1 patients (p = .03/p = .003). Peak FDS relaxation velocity correlated inversely with C(C)TG repeat numbers in DM patients. Sensitivity of TDU parameters to detect myotonic dystrophy varied between 50% and 75%, with a specificity of 95%.DiscussionOur exploratory study suggests that TDU could serve as a novel tool to quantify myotonia in DM patients, but larger follow‐up studies are warranted to validate its diagnostic accuracy.

Publisher

Wiley

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