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Perspectives |
RM Lovering, PT, PhD, is Research Associate, Department of Physiology, University of Maryland, School of Medicine, 685 W Baltimore St, Baltimore, MD 21201 (USA) (rlovering{at}som.umaryland.edu).
NC Porter, MD, is Assistant Professor, Department of Neurology, University of Maryland, School of Medicine
RJ Bloch, PhD, is Professor, Department of Physiology, University of Maryland, School of Medicine
Address all correspondence to Dr Lovering
| Abstract |
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Key Words: Muscular dystrophy Skeletal muscle
| Introduction |
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One of the goals of MD research is to understand how sarcolemmal damage is initiated, how it is repaired, and how the sarcolemma can be protected (or the damage minimized) by pharmacologic or therapeutic interventions. Researchers studying muscle injuries share these same goals. In skeletal muscle injuries, particularly those resulting from lengthening ("eccentric") contractions, the membrane is damaged and the cytoskeleton is disrupted.8 The initial injury is followed by pain, inflammation, weakness, and often necrosis, which are then followed by regeneration of muscle fibers. Because these findings parallel those in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the study of muscle injuryits mechanisms, management, and repairlikely will provide important insights into the mechanisms underlying many of the MDs.
| Disorders Associated With Dystrophin |
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Duchenne muscular dystrophy is caused by the absence of dystrophin, a 427 kDa protein found on the cytoplasmic surface of the plasma membrane of muscle fibers (the sarcolemma) in skeletal and cardiac muscle (Fig. 2). Dystrophin provides mechanical stability to the sarcolemma and is likely involved in force transmission between the intracellular contractile apparatus and the extracellular matrix (ECM), which envelops the fiber and is connected to the tendon.16 Without dystrophin, the sarcolemma becomes fragile and unable to withstand the stress of normal muscle contractions.16 The resulting membrane damage leads to increased intracellular Ca2+, which activates proteases that ultimately result in fiber death or necrosis. The regeneration of myofibers that normally occurs after damage to healthy skeletal muscle, which also occurs in the first few years of life in patients with DMD, does not persist as these patients mature. Instead, regenerative capacity becomes insufficient to replace lost muscle fibers.1719 Necrotic fibers become replaced by fat and connective tissue, to such an extent that there can be an apparent "pseudohypertrophy," especially in the calves.
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The majority of patients with DMD have unimpaired intelligence, but some have mild intellectual impairments. In 30% of patients with DMD, the mean intelligence quotient is 18 points below normal,23 and these patients may have trouble with attention, verbal learning, and memory.13 The pathological basis of these mild cognitive impairments is likely changes in isoforms of dystrophin expressed in the brain.24 The impairments are likely due to the biological effect of missing dystrophin rather than loss of mobility and a disadvantaged lifestyle, as shown by a comparison with age-matched patients with spinal muscular atrophy.25
Approximately 1 in 3,500 newborn males worldwide are affected with DMD.7,13,14 The gene for dystrophin is one of the largest known in humans (approximately 1.2 million base pairs) and is composed of 79 exons.4 The sheer size and complexity of the dystrophin gene may account for the high frequency of mutations, with approximately one third of DMD cases arising from new, spontaneous mutations.7,26 The remaining cases are inherited in an X-linked recessive fashion. Females who inherit the mutation do not develop DMD, because they also inherit a second, "healthy" X chromo-some from their fathers. Consequently, female carriers are usually unaffected, unless there is an abnormality of X chromosome inactivation or a chromosomal anomaly, both of which are extremely rare.6 Thus, essentially only boys acquire DMD.
Becker Muscular Dystrophy
Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) is an allelic variant of DMD. Whereas DMD is caused by the essential absence of dystrophin, BMD is caused by abnormalities in the quality or quantity of dystrophin. In general, the greater the amount of dystrophin, the less severe the myopathy.27 The onset of BMD is usually between the ages of 5 and 15 years, but can occur as late as the fourth decade of life. The phenotypic presentation of BMD is similar to that of DMD, but is clinically milder and with more variability and a much slower progression. Patients with BMD do not have contractures or severe scoliosis, and many live well into adulthood, sometimes to a normal life span.
| The Dystrophin Complex and Its Organization |
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-dystroglycan, which in turn connects the DAPC to the ECM.32 The major ligand of
-dystroglycan in the ECM is likely laminin-2, a major component of the basement membrane surrounding muscle fibers. Neurexin and agrin, however, also may be significant binding partners.33 Additional components of the DAPC include several sarcoglycans (see below), which also span the sarcolemmal membrane, and peripheral membrane proteins, including syntrophins and dystrobrevins, that bind to the C-terminal region of dystrophin. Additional proteins of the DAPC are still being discovered.34,35 Inside the muscle fiber, the N-terminus of dystrophin binds to F-actin,36 connecting the DAPC to the actin cytoskeleton and ultimately to the contractile apparatus. Thus, dystrophin is the central component of a molecular link that connects the contractile apparatus inside the muscle fiber to the ECM outside the muscle fiber. Dystrophin plays an important structural role in stabilizing the sarcolemma during muscle contractions,16 and it is thought to transmit force laterally across the sarco-lemma to the ECM.37,38
Although loss of dystrophin results in DMD, no naturally occurring mutations have been described for the dystroglycan gene, which transcribes both the
and ß components. Targeted deletion of this gene in animals results in embryonic death39 rather than progressive muscular weakness. Recently, however, mutations that result in altered glycosylation of
-dystroglycan have been reported to be linked to both murine40 and human MDs,41,42 including muscle-eye-brain disease, Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS), and a type of congenital MD (MDC1D).42 These mutations alter the ability of
-dystroglycan to bind to its extracellular ligands, including laminin-2. Thus, the structural connection of the ECM with the intracellular actin cytoskeleton appears to be dependent on the state of the DAPC.
Sarcospan is a 25 kD protein in the DAPC that is firmly anchored to the sarcolemmal membrane.43 The amount of sarcospan is dramatically reduced in DMD muscle compared with normal muscle,43 but surprisingly, animals genetically engineered to lack sarcospan maintain normal function.44 Sarcospan is tightly linked to the sarcoglycans. The
-, ß-,
-,
, possibly
-sarcoglycans are integral membrane glycoproteins that associate with ß-dystroglycan. Loss-of-function mutations in the genes encoding for the sarcoglycans result in various types of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD). Because the loss of one sarcoglycan can affect the stability of all the other sarcoglycans,45 these proteins, like dystrophin, play an important role in stabilizing the DAPC.
Several proteins bind to dystrophin on the inner surface of sarcolemma, including syntrophin and dystrobrevin. There are 3 related syntrophins (
-, ß1-, and ß2-syntrophin) and 2 dystrobrevins (
- and ß-dystrobrevin). These proteins help to bring together other components of the DAPC in a variety of combinations.46 Syntrophin has been shown to bind nNOS47 and is linked to signaling within the cell,48 although the relevance of this is not clear. Mutations in the genes that encode these proteins have not yet been identified in humans, except for a mutation in
-dystrobrevin that has been described in left ventricular noncompaction, an uncommon genetic disorder of endocardial morpho-genesis with a reportedly high mortality rate.49 Mice that have been genetically engineered (so-called "knock out" mice) to lack syntrophin and dystrobrevin, in an attempt to determine their functions,50,51 display only a mild skeletal and cardiac muscle disease.
It is quite clear that dystrophin and its associated proteins that make up the DAPC are important in membrane function, but other membrane proteins also seem to have a role. Integrins are membrane proteins that are important in cell signaling and that bind to laminin in the ECM. Mutation of the most common form of inte-grins in muscle,
7ß1, results in a form of congenital MD in humans and animals,52 implying that they have a role in membrane stability.
Most MDs are associated with missing or truncated structural proteins at the sarcolemma, such as those discussed previously, or mutations in other sarcolemmal components (eg, caveolin-3, dysferlin), extracellular proteins (eg, laminin), and proteins of the nuclear membrane (eg, emerin and lamin) (Fig. 2). However, even disruption of enzymes can give rise to MDs. Calpain is one of the Ca2+-activated enzymes thought to be involved in breakdown of the myofiber after disruption of the DAPC and consequent sarcolemmal damage,53,54 yet the absence of calpain itself results in MD. Dysferlin is another protein considered to be unrelated to sarcolemmal structural stability,55 yet its absence also results in MD. The sarcolemma of dysferlin "knock out" animals (animals that lack dysferlin as a result of homologous recombination) does not have increased susceptibility to mechanical force, such as in DMD.55 Instead, dysferlin seems to be important in the repair of membranes.56 These examples indicate that MD can result from the loss of structural proteins, loss of enzymatic proteins, or loss of another class of proteins involved in membrane repair. Findings such as these illustrate the complex pathways that are involved in maintaining the health of normal muscle and that, when altered, can result in MD.
| Other Dystrophies |
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Limb-girdle muscular dystrophies can either be auto-somal dominant (single gene defect on a chromosome from either parent or one copy of a mutant gene and one normal gene, known as type 1 LGMD) or autosomal recessive (a defect or mutation on the gene from the chromosome of each parent is needed, known as type 2 LGMD). The type 2 LGMDs are more severe, with some resembling DMD in severity. Sixteen genetically different LGMDs have been identified, with a correspondingly wide range of phenotypes. The various types of LGMDs are listed in the Table. It should be noted that a small percentage of patients diagnosed with LGMD actually have mutations in the gene for dystrophin, although they do not lack the protein as in DMD and BMD, which also are characterized by proximal weakness. Therefore, careful genetic screening is indicated, and a muscle biopsy may be needed to confirm the diagnosis.
The majority of LGMDs are autosomal recessive. Patients exhibit a variable severity of muscle disease, usually involving scapular winging and weakness of proximal limb and trunk muscles.7 The most common LGMD, LGMD2A, is the result of a mutation in the gene for calpain-3, a muscle-specific enzyme (discussed earlier). Clinical findings include limb-girdle atrophy and weakness that begins in the gluteal and hip adductor muscles,57 with highly variable patterns of progression. Onset also is variable and can occur at any time from 2 years of age to middle age.58 Another type 2 LGMD, LGMD2B, is the result of deficiency or absence of dysferlin, a protein involved with trafficking of vesicles to the sarcolemma for repair after membrane damage.55 Patients with LGMD2B display normal mobility in childhood, but eventually develop slowly progressive muscle weakness without signs of inflammation.59 It is not clear whether the amount of dysferlin loss correlates to the phenotypic severity.59,60
Except for LGMD2A and LGMD2B, the other LGMDs are caused by deficiencies in specific structural proteins. Four of the type 2 LGMDs are due to the loss of sarcoglycans. There are 5 known sarcoglycans (
, ß,
,
, and possibly
) (Fig. 1) at the muscle fiber membrane that form part of the DAPC, and genetic defects affecting 4 of these proteins cause specific type 2 LGMDs, also known as "sarcoglycanopathies" (Table). A deficiency in one of the sarcoglycans (
) has not been associated with any primary muscle disease so far.61,62 In general, proximal muscles of the lower extremities are affected early in sarcoglycanopathies, followed by gradual weakness of the shoulder girdle muscles with consequent scapular winging. There is considerable heterogeneity among the sarcoglycanopathies in the patterns of muscles affected and the rate of progression, compared with dystrophinopathies.63
Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy
After DMD and LGMDs, facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is the third most common inherited muscle disease, affecting approximately 1 in 20,000 people in the United States. It is an autosomal dominant disorder with a variable age of onset, but it usually is first detected in early adolescence. As indicated by its name, FSHD is characterized by weakness in muscles of the face and proximal upper extremity, including those muscles that stabilize the scapula. This muscle weakness results in winging and anterior tilting of the scapula. Although extraocular muscles are not affected, weakness in muscles around the eye (ie, obicularis oculi, a facial muscle) may be evident when patients sleep with their eyes slightly open, a symptom that may manifest itself before other symptoms develop. There is also difficulty in whistling or blowing (eg, blowing out candles). Distal extremity muscles also can be affected, and the weakness is often asymmetric. There is a wide range of clinical severity overall, with symptoms that can include cardiac, cognitive, visual, and auditory impairments.6466 Progression of FSHD usually is slow, however, and these patients have a near-normal life expectancy.
Clinical diagnosis of FSHD is based initially on the pattern of muscle involvement, but genetic tests, which can detect FSHD with a 98% success rate, are now preferred. Although the specific gene responsible for FSHD has not been identified, FSHD is associated with a deletion of 3.3 kb repeats (called D4Z4) mapped to the telomeric end of the long arm of chromosome 4.67,68 This region, termed 4q35, normally has 11 to 150 D4Z4 repeats, but in patients with FSHD, the number of repeats is less than 11. Although it was thought until recently that the severity of clinical presentation increased as the number of D4Z4 repeats under 11 decreased,69 this has recently been challenged.70 The telomeric D4Z4 repeats have most recently been thought to affect anchoring of chromosome 4 to the inner nuclear membrane.71 If true, FSHD would resemble other MDs, such as Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD), that are nuclear in origin.72,73
Emery-Dreifuss Muscular Dystrophy
Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy can have 2 different genetic forms: X-linked or autosomal dominant. Although both genetic forms have the same phenotype, the X-linked form is more common. Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy affects proteins in the inner nuclear membrane of muscle fibers (and other tissues), specifically lamin, a nuclear form of intermediate filament protein (70 kD) that lines the nucleoplasmic surface of the inner membrane, and emerin, an integral protein (34 kD) of the inner nuclear membrane that is thought to anchor lamins74 (Fig. 2). It is not clear how defects in these nuclear membrane proteins result in the pheno-type. It has been suggested that these mutated proteins increase the susceptibility of the nucleus to mechanical stress or alter gene expression.73
Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy presents clinically with the triad of early contractures, muscle weakness, and cardiac conduction defects.72 Weakness occurs in the shoulder girdle and distal lower extremities ("humeroperoneal" weakness) and usually starts in childhood, although symptoms can begin at any time between the neonatal period and the third decade. Contractures are usually out of proportion to the weakness and affect many joints, especially the elbows, followed by the ankles and cervical spine. Although patients with EDMD are not wheelchair-bound, contractures are a major cause of morbidity, creating more functional impairment than the weakness. The major cause of mortality is cardiac disease, which often results in premature and sudden death.75
Oculopharyngeal Muscular Dystrophy
Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is an autosomal dominant disorder that is characterized by progressive eyelid ptosis and progressive dysphagia, followed by involvement of other muscles of the head and neck, and eventually proximal limb weakness.15 The extraocular muscles are usually spared, although not always.76 Onset occurs in late adulthood, and a clinical test that is sometimes used is timed swallowing, which is 2 times slower than normal in people with OPMD.77
Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy is caused by an abnormal number of GCG trinucleotide repeats in the PABPN1 gene that encodes the polyadenylate binding protein, nuclear 1 protein. This trinucleotide expansion in the PABPN1 gene interferes with a nuclear protein involved in gene transciption. The PABPN1 gene was previously known as the PAB2 or PABP2 gene (polyadenylation binding protein 2), the OPMD gene, or the nuclear 1 gene, and these names are still encountered in the literature.78 Interestingly, OPMD can be inherited in an autosomal dominant or autosomal recessive fashion.77 Testing for the disorder is now commercially available.79
Myotonic Dystrophy
Myotonic dystrophies are the most common form of MD in adults. Myotonic dystrophies are now recognized as genetically heterogeneous diseases, caused by 2 distinct mutations. Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is caused by an expansion of a CTG trinucleotide repeat in a gene for an enzyme (the DMPK gene that encodes the enzyme dystrophia myotonica protein kinase, a serine/threo-nine kinase).80,81 The CTG expansion is in an untranslated region of the gene, so that the exact pathogenesis is still uncertain (the most promising theory posits that the mutation leads to abnormal processing and splicing of certain species of RNA). The number of repeats tends to increase from one generation to the next, which results in an earlier age of onset for subsequent generations (called "anticipation") as well as an increase in severity. The features of classic myotonic dystrophy include myotonia (skeletal muscle hyperexcitability and slowed relaxation time), slowly progressive muscle weakness, cardiac conduction defects, pain, peripheral neuropathy, frontal balding, temporal wasting, cataracts, and endocrine disturbances such as diabetes. Myotonic dystrophy type 1 may present in infancy (CMD) or childhood, but the disorder typically presents in young adults, with a prevalence estimated to be as high as 1/8,000.7,82
Myotonic dystrophy type 2 (DM2) is caused by an expansion of a CCTG repeat in intron 1 of the gene ZNF9, which encodes zinc finger protein 9 on chromo-some 3q.8385 Both DM1 and DM2 are inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, and both affect multiple organ systems. Although the 2 types can be clinically indistinguishable in some cases, DM2 is more likely to be associated with more proximal weakness (proximal myo-tonic myopathy [PROMM]) as opposed to the predominantly distal weakness seen in classic myotonic dystrophy (DM1). Before the genetics were clarified, DM2 and PROMM were thought to be distinct disorders. Overall the DM2/PROMM phenotype appears to be less severe than the DM1 phenotype, with less cognitive impairment.86 The pathophysiology of DM2 is unclear; however, it may be similar to DM1, in that noncoding nucleotide expansions (in transcribed, but untranslated, portions of the gene) seem to interfere with proper RNA splicing.87
Congenital Muscular Dystrophy
Congenital muscular dystrophies are a class of relatively rare conditions that present in infancy. Because of the vagaries of the naming system, many forms of CMD are classified with the limb-girdle muscular dystrophies (eg, severe congenital autosomal recessive muscular dystrophy [SCARMD]). The typical CMD cases are often those associated with disturbances in the central nervous system. Newborns and infants with CMD have significant weakness and up to a 10-fold increase in the blood level of the enzyme creatine kinase,88 a general indicator of muscle damage. Clinical manifestations include muscle weakness, hypotonia, delayed motor development, and severe contractures with consequent joint deformities.
A common form of CMD is associated with a protein in the DAPC. Laminin is a component of the ECM that binds to dystroglycan in the DAPC (Fig. 1). The
2-chain of laminin, also known as "merosin," is absent or depleted in this "merosin-deficient CMD." Children with CMD have marked weakness and never acquire the ability to walk independently. The muscle weakness usually is not progressive, and life expectancy is nearly normal. There is a slight increase in incidence of seizures and mental retardation in children lacking merosin,89 but the majority of children have no structural brain abnormalities or academic deficits.6 Abnormalities of myelin maturation are extremely common, however, and help in making the diagnosis.
A more severe form of CMD associated with brain abnormalities is WWS. Walker-Warburg syndrome is due to mutations in the gene encoding protein O-mannosyltransferase. The disorder is associated with abnormal glycosylation of
-dystroglycan (Fig. 1), disrupting the linkage of the cell membrane to the ECM in brain and muscle.33 A condition that bears some resemblance to WWS, known as muscle-eye-brain disease, is caused by mutations in the gene for the protein O-mannose ß-1,2-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase (POMGNT1 gene). Abnormal glycosylation of
-dystroglycan probably plays a role in this condition as well. Lastly, Fukuyama CMD, a very common form of CMD in Japan, is associated with less profound brain abnormalities than WWS and muscle-eye-brain disease, but nonetheless is characterized by profound mental retardation, weakness, and developmental delay. Fukuyama disease, which is caused by mutations in the Fukutin gene,41 also appears to be associated with abnormal glycosylation of
-dystroglycan.
| Animal Models of Muscular Dystrophy |
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Because of availability and knowledge of the mouse genome, mouse models of many of the MDs have been identified or genetically engineered. For example, disruption of the genes encoding the sarcoglycans has provided models for all the known sarcoglycanopathies (subtypes of type 2 LGMD), and there are at least 5 mouse models for deficiency of the laminin
2 chain,9194 providing models for one type of CMD. The myd mouse provides a model for CMD with brain malformation,95 associated with altered glycosylation of
-dystroglycan. There are also models of muscular dystrophy in other species, such as dogs that lack dystrophin (CXMD dog)96 and the cardiomyopathic hamster,97 which lacks
-sarcoglycan.
Animal studies have used methods such as running,98 swimming,99 and electrical stimulation to determine the effects of training on animals with muscular dystrophy. Heavy resistance training has deleterious effects on dystrophic skeletal muscle,100,101 particularly if it involves eccentric contractions.16,102 In addition to the risk of further muscle damage, there is no evidence of beneficial adaptation to heavy resistance training in dystrophic animals or in humans with MD.103,104 Several well-controlled studies, however, do indicate that light to moderate exercise can have beneficial effects in patients with MD, such as increased strength. Most of these studies, regardless of species and differences in methodology, indicate a beneficial adaptation to exercise in dystrophic animals that is similar to that in control animals.105109 Unfortunately, there are relatively few controlled studies available that are easily translated to the human population. Detailed studies to determine the forms of exercise that are most beneficial to patients with different types of MDs are greatly needed.
| Potential New Treatments |
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Because dystrophin is the central component of a large complex of proteins at the cell membrane that is missing in DMD, an ideal treatment would be simply to replace the missing protein. Much of the focus in DMD is on gene therapy to do just that, but delivery of the dystrophin gene to all muscles of the body has presented some serious challenges. First, the dystrophin gene is enormous (2.4 Mb and is not readily inserted into the "vectors" that are best able to deliver it. Even the 14 kb complementary DNA (cDNA) sequence is too large for most viral vectors. There are a few viruses used as vectors that can carry the full-length dystrophin cDNA plus a promoter, but their ability to persist in muscle is transient and their safety is unclear.101 Some adeno-associated viral vectors efficiently infect muscle, where they can persist for years, but they have a limited cloning capacity (
6 kb) and, therefore, are unable to carry cargo as large as the dystrophin cDNA. One method used to circumvent this is based on the fact that dystrophin can retain a large part of its function even when missing much of its middle region, as long as the "mini-dystrophin" contains the N-terminal and C-terminal sequences responsible for actin and dystroglycan binding, respectively.31,101,115,116 As a consequence, smaller, truncated dystrophins with functional capacities near that of the full-length protein have been used successfully in studies with mdx mice, in which they rescued the dystrophic muscle to a nearly normal phenotype.101 Alternative therapies being explored substitute nonviral carriers (eg, polymers) to deliver the dystrophin cDNA to muscle.117
Although these and other gene therapies suggest potentially exciting new ways to manage MDs, significant hurdles to use in humans still exist.117 Gene therapy for MD requires efficient delivery to all striated muscles of the body, usually including the heart. This means that the delivery has to overcome the physical barriers (ie, the blood vessels, basement membranes, and the fascia) surrounding each muscle. Furthermore, expressing a protein in a patient who lacks a functional copy of the gene can stimulate an immune response, as can the vector used to deliver the transgene.116,118,119
One possible solution is to use utrophin. Utrophin, short for "ubiquitous dystrophin," is highly homologous to dystrophin.120 During fetal muscle development, utrophin is found along the entire muscle sarcolemma. Once dystrophin is expressed, however, utrophin disappears from most of the sarcolemmal membrane so that, in normal adult muscle, it is located only at the neuromuscular and myotendinous junctions.121 One reason the mdx mice do not display pathology equivalent to that seen in DMD may be that utrophin is up-regulated to levels sufficient to compensate, in part, for the lack of dystrophin. This idea has been supported by the observation that mice lacking dystrophin and utrophin have a much more severe myopathy.121123 This suggests that utrophin could replace dystrophin if it could be delivered at sufficient quantities to the muscles of patients with DMD or, even better, if its local production in each myofiber could be increased.121,122 One large advantage of this strategy over that of delivering dystrophin is that patients with DMD already make utrophin, so they are unlikely to initiate an immune response to the protein. Attempts to induce utrophin expression in adult muscle so far have focused on characterization of its promoter region, which, if activated, could up-regulate utrophin in patients with DMD.124
Still other potential treatments involve stem cell therapy125,126 and myoblast transfer.127,128 Stem cell studies in the mdx mouse show that bone marrowderived stem cells injected intravenously can migrate into muscle, differentiate into muscle fibers, and result in partial restoration of dystrophin.126 Myoblasts, muscle precursor cells that can proliferate and produce thousands of daughter cells, can be obtained from biopsies and grown in vitro. Transplantation of these cells from donors (or genetically corrected myoblasts from the host) can result in some myofibers that express dystrophin.127,129 Despite the early success in animal studies, clinical trials in boys with DMD have failed to yield significant benefit. The levels of dystrophin restoration have been low, and it is questionable whether myoblast transfer results in a functional change.129131 Other concerns with myoblast transfer include the need for hundreds of intramuscular injections, overcoming immunological rejection, and high costs. At present, the most promising technologies involve the use of microdystrophins expressed by adeno-associated viruses,132 but the problems of low delivery efficiency and immune reactions still need to be addressed.
| Management of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy |
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Physical Therapy
Physical therapists are ideally trained to help care for patients with MD, especially because of the primary involvement of skeletal muscle and the secondary effects of the disease on the joints. Aside from developing a safe exercise program, patients need to be monitored for progressive scoliosis, homes need to be evaluated for safety, assistive devices are usually needed, and family members need to be taught to perform passive-range-of-motion exercises, transfers, and repositioning. These skills and many more are already practiced by most physical therapists, yet knowledge of the specific MD being treated is essential in developing an appropriate treatment strategy.
Although DMD is incurable, it is not untreatable. The principles for treating people with DMD and other MDs are similar, but vary in degree. The major goals are to prevent the progression of joint contractures and spinal deformity, to prolong ambulation for as long as possible, and to maintain the best level of health and function possible.27,145 Physical therapy and pain management should be started as early as possible. Physical therapy, particularly in combination with night splinting, can help delay the onset of contractures,146 which are more of a limitation to ambulation than muscle weakness.145,147 Several researchers148150 have suggested that light to moderate resistive exercise also can retard the progression of muscle weakness without negative effects. Although many factors can contribute to fatigue,151153 exercise has been used in many neuro-muscular diseases to combat the deconditioning that occurs with immobility.149,150,152,154
The role of strength training in MDs is controversial, particularly with DMD. Although there are very few randomized or controlled studies in patients with DMD, studies involving patients with DMD indicate little to no physical decline with exercise.145,155 On the contrary, exercise appears to be beneficial to patients with DMD148 or patients with other MDs.156 Because of the increased susceptibility to muscle damage, patients with MD should be advised to avoid exhaustive or maximal effort during exercise and to use exercise regimens that minimize exercise-induced muscle damage.102 Thus, resistive eccentric exercises, which are associated with muscle damage, should be avoided.157162 Hydrotherapy is likely to result in minimal muscle damage, because it minimizes the need for eccentric contractions. Hydrotherapy appears especially useful in the later stages of DMD in order to help maintain mobility in the absence of gravity,27 although there is very little objective evidence published to support this commonly held hypothesis.
In addition to hydrotherapy, land-based exercises also are useful; however, home exercise programs must be reasonable and easy to follow in order to prevent non-adherence.163 Muscle weakness typically progresses at different rates in different muscles. Although the reasons for this are unclear, the larger limb-girdle muscles are affected first, whereas smaller muscles are spared until later.27 For example, in DMD, weakness of the quadriceps femoris muscles occurs early and plays a significant role in deterioration of gait.164 As in any research on exercise, the intensity, frequency, duration, and mode of exercise can vary between studies, making comparisons difficult. This is especially true with studies involving neuromuscular diseases such as MDs, because the patient populations often are not homogeneous and the timing of the intervention may play a role in the outcome.103 Establishing clearly defined exercise protocols from the available evidence, therefore, is difficult.145 Future randomized and controlled research is needed to fully ascertain the effects of exercise in MDs.
Contractures
Joint contractures are a major problem in many MDs. They clearly limit joint function, but also may contribute to muscle weakness, because the force generated by a muscle is related to its length. In some instances, muscle weakness can be compensated for during gait, such as by maintaining exaggerated anterior pelvic tilt and decreased hip extension in the stance phase (moving the line of gravity anterior to the knee), by using an equine gait, or by changing the base of support.147,164 All of these compensations are directed at altering the moment of inertia at the knee in an attempt to compensate for quadriceps femoris muscle insufficiency. Contractures, however, often are permanent, and it is difficult to compensate for them. Although contractures may be the result of postural compensations for muscle weakness, they are more likely the result of a maintained position over time. For example, flexion contractures of the elbows are rare in patients with DMD who are ambulatory, but usually develop gradually after wheel-chair use.165 Common treatments include frequent changes in position, passive or active stretching, and night splints, specifically ankle-foot orthoses (AFOs). A combination of these is likely to yield a better outcome and prolong independent ambulation.146,166 Daytime AFOs may be prescribed to help retard the progress of equine deformity; however, the use of an AFO also can interfere with independent gait, because the hyper-lordotic and equine gait of many patients with DMD is a compensation for weakness of the hip extensor and quadriceps femoris muscles.147,164 The use of aggressive physical therapy or surgical release to delay contractures, combined with the proper use of orthoses, may help to prolong ambulation by 1 or 2 years.167
| Summary |
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Much of the research regarding treatment has focused on DMD, because of its severity and frequency. Current evidence suggests that exercise can improve muscle function in patients with DMD, yet the appropriate frequency, intensity, and duration are still unclear. Different amounts and types of exercise are indicated for other forms of MD,145 suggesting that what we learn about possible treatments for one of these diseases will not be fully applicable to others. Furthermore, it is still not clear whether the benefits of increased muscle strength, which appropriate exercise regimens might facilitate, have a significant effect on functional outcome. Contractures are common in MDs, especially in the more severe diseases and when the patient is no longer ambulatory. Early treatment, with stretching, active and passive range of motion, and appropriate orthoses, is essential. There are obvious ethical dilemmas in withdrawing current standards of treatment in order to perform controlled studies, but animal models will likely continue to provide some guidelines toward prescribing exercises. The benefits of steroids appear to outweigh the side effects, yet up to now no drug substantially affects the overall natural history of MDs. More effective drugs and therapies will likely be developed when specific pathologic mechanisms are more clearly understood. There is great hope that gene therapy will someday be possible, but even when such therapies are available, physical therapy will remain essential for treating patients with MDs, and it will behoove physical therapists to have an understanding of the benefits, limitations, and expected results of various gene delivery systems.
| Footnotes |
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* For more information on muscular dystrophy, contact: Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA), National Headquarters, 3300 E Sunrise Dr, Tucson, AZ 85718, or visit the MDA Web site (http://www.mdausa.org/). ![]()
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