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Title: Patterns of abnormal histochemical fibre type differentitation in human muscle biopsies. Author: Johnson MA, Kucukyalcin DK. Journal: J Neurol Sci; 1978 Jul; 37(3):159-78. PubMed ID: 150455. Abstract: The histochemical profile of individual human skeletal muscle fibres was analysed by correlating mitochondrial oxidative enzyme activity and that of myofibrillar ATPase at pH 9.5 and after pre-incubation at pH 4.3 and pH 4.6. In normal control muscle, only a small percentage of fibres did not conform to one or other of the normal variants of Type I and Type II fibres. In biopsies from early cases of Werdnig-Hoffmann disease, the denervated fibre populations contained many abnormal Type I and Type II fibres, including "IIc" fibres, but the basic distinction between Type I and Type II was preserved. However, in infantile spinal muscular atrophy patients aged two years and over, this distinction was progressively lost, leading to the total dedifferentiation of the atrophied fibres. In the Kugelberg-Welander form of spinal muscular atrophy, many of the constituent fibres of re-innervated groups displayed normal or near-normal histochemical profiles, but chronically denervated fibres became totally dedifferentiated. In Duchenne dystrophy, the spectrum of histochemical types appeared to be more continuous due to the emergence of fibres with properties intermediate between those of the normal variants, but the basic distinction between Type I and Type II fibres was preserved in the majority of cases. The percentage of severely abnormal fibres was higher in Type II than Type I and probably contributed to the observed decrease in the overall proportion of Type II fibres. Although very small atrophied fibres were observed in biopsies from cases of Becker and Duchenne dystrophy, these did not show the total dedifferentiation seen in the chronically denervated fibres in cases of spinal muscular atrophy.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]