Myasthenia Gravis (MG) can affect any of
the muscles that you control voluntarily. It can affect muscles of the
face, hands, eyes, arms and legs and those muscles involved in chewing,
swallowing and talking. Muscles that control breathing and neck movement
also can be affected.
MG does not affect involuntary muscles such as the heart, smooth muscles of the gut, blood vessels, and uterus.
The hallmark of weakness related to MG
is that is worsens with sustained activity of the involved muscle(s).
Eye muscle weakness worsens with reading, and double vision may improve
with a brief rest. When speech is affected, symptoms worsen with
prolonged talking. Extremity weakness if often noticed when holding arms
over the head. Drooping of the eyelids, neck weakness and other
symptoms are usually worse at the end of the day.
Symptoms, which vary in type, severity and combination, may include:
- Drooping of one or both eyelids
- Double or blurred vision
- Weakness in arms, hands, fingers, neck, face or legs
- Difficulty in chewing, smiling, swallowing or talking
- Excessive fatigue in exercised muscle groups
- Shortness of breath, difficulty taking a deep breath or coughing
MG is often called the “snowflake
disease” because it differs so much from person to person. The degree of
muscle weakness and the muscles that are affected vary greatly from
patient to patient and from time to time.
For most people, the first noticeable
symptom is weakness of the eye muscles causing drooping eyelids or
double vision. In others, difficulty in swallowing and slurred speech
may be the first signs. The onset of the disease is usually gradual over
weeks or months, but may be more sudden. Symptoms may come and go over
time, and even resolve completely for months or longer. Symptoms often
are not immediately recognized as MG, especially if they are subtle or
variable.
Most individuals do not develop all of
the symptoms of MG. In some patients weakness remains limited to the
eyes for entire course of the disease. These patients have ocular MG.
Most patients have generalized MG where symptoms also involve muscles
besides the eyes. When muscles involving speech or swallowing are
involved, this is sometimes called bulbar weakness.
MG symptoms differ somewhat for MG
patients who test positive for MuSK antibodies. Most MuSK MG patients
are women, and tend to have more severe symptoms. Researchers have found
that this group of patients often require higher doses of prednisone,
and tend to improve more with plasmapheresis than IVIg treatments.
The course of MG during pregnancy is
hard to predict. For some women, symptoms worsen; in others symptoms
stay the same or improve. Because MG increases risk during pregnancy and
MG medications pose risks to an unborn child, a woman with MG should
discuss pregnancy with her doctor in advance.
If a person’s ability to breathe, cough,
or protect their airway becomes insufficient, it’s called a myasthenic
crisis. These patients require prompt treatment, and may need mechanical
breathing assistance in a hospital for a period of time until their
strength improves. While most myasthenics never experience a crisis,
those who have trouble swallowing and talking are the ones most likely
also to have trouble breathing. Progressive warning signs that
swallowing, talking, and breathing are becoming compromised should be
addressed immediately.
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