scholarly journals Idiopathic inflammatory myopathy: From muscle biopsy to serology

2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
pp. 0
Author(s):  
Ritu Verma ◽  
VimalKumar Paliwal
2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emer Gates ◽  
Ben Faber ◽  
Steve Hepple ◽  
Harsha Gunawardena

Abstract Introduction Myositis can be infective, metabolic or immune-mediated. Idiopathic inflammatory myopathy, which is immune-mediated, tends to be subacute, with symmetrical symptoms, overlap clinical features and positive autoimmune serology. We present a case of acute onset lower limb seronegative inflammatory myopathy with a normal creatinine kinase (CK), a marked acute phase response that responded promptly to immunomodulatory therapy. Case description A 68-year-old man presented with a 2-week history of lower limb pain with subjective weakness, on a background of well-controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus and hypertension. He was admitted with worsening symptoms of marked left thigh pain, night sweats, and fevers. On admission, he had swinging pyrexia (above >39 °C) while remaining haemodynamically stable. He had focal tenderness over the left anterolateral thigh, with a good range of movement, normal power and no signs of focal collection or cellulitis. There were no extra-muscular features to suggest systemic infection or overlap connective tissue disease. Bloods showed C-reactive protein (CRP) 225, normal CK 212 and negative blood cultures. X-rays knee, femur and pelvis were normal. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) on T2, fat-suppressed STIR sequences demonstrated increased signal/oedema both thighs throughout the anterior muscle compartment and along the fascial plane, notably most severe in the left vastus lateralis. He was treated empirically for infective myositis. Despite 14 days of broad-spectrum antibiotics, he remained febrile with persistently elevated CRP. There was no focal collection, lymphadenopathy or occult malignancy on CT abdomen and pelvis. Trans-oesophageal echocardiogram showed no evidence of infective endocarditis but revealed incidental moderate aortic stenosis. The patient described persistent now bilateral thigh pain with continued normal CK and high CRP. Full autoimmune screen (ANA, ANCA, ACE and complement studies) was negative. Despite negative nuclear and cytoplasmic HEp-2 immunofluorence, extended myositis immunoblot was negative. Muscle biopsy from the left vastus lateralis demonstrated inflammation within the perimysium and perivasculature. In view of biopsy findings and no response to anti-microbial therapy, prednisolone (0.5mg/kg) with significant clinical response (resolution of fever and pain) with concurrent normalisation in CRP. The patient remains in remission following steroid reduction with no additional immunomodulatory therapy required. Discussion We report a case of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy presenting with predominantly asymmetrical symptoms, normal CK, marked inflammatory response and negative myositis autoantibodies. Diagnosis was confirmed on MRI and muscle biopsy. The normal CK can be explained by the histology demonstrating inflammation in perivascular regions and around muscle fibres, rather than inflammation or necrosis in the muscle fascicles and fibres themselves. Idiopathic inflammatory myopathy including sporadic inclusion-body myositis, dermatomyositis, overlap CTD myositis and polymyositis/necrotising myopathy subsets are distinguishable based on clinical features, autoantibodies, MRI and biopsy features. The table below summarises the atypical aspects of this case. Differential diagnoses for this case include atypical infection, sarcoid myopathy and amyloid myonecrosis secondary to diabetes. Table: Features of typical idiopathic inflammatory myopathy compared with this atypical case.Idiopathic inflammatory myopathiesOur patient- typical featuresOur patient- atypical featuresSymptomsPain, fever, weakness.Pain and fever.Normal power.Clinical distributionSymmetrical, proximal muscle groups.Predominantly asymmetrical (worse on left), only in thighs.AntibodiesMyositis associated autoantibodiesSeronegativeMuscle enzymesElevated CKNormal CK.Inflammatory markersNormal to slightly elevated CRPMarkedly raised CRP and WCC.MR imaging resultsFocal muscle oedema in affected musclesDiffuse and speckled muscle oedema Key learning points Early idiopathic inflammatory myopathy can have inflammation around the muscle fascicles in the perimysium. Normal CK does not rule out a diagnosis of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy. Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies can present atypically with fevers >39 °C, significantly raised inflammatory markers, and asymmetrical symptoms and MRI findings. In the absence of overlap features, normal CK and negative serology, MRI and biopsy can delineate the type of myositis and direct management. Conflicts of interest The authors have declared no conflicts of interest.


2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 844
Author(s):  
M. de Visser ◽  
J. van de Vlekkert ◽  
M. Maas ◽  
J.E. Hoogendijk ◽  
I.N. Schaik

2007 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 341-345 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Connor ◽  
Simon Stebbings ◽  
Noelyn Anne Hung ◽  
Graeme Hammond-Tooke ◽  
Grant Meikle ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 253-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janneke Van De Vlekkert ◽  
Mario Maas ◽  
Jessica E. Hoogendijk ◽  
Marianne De Visser ◽  
Ivo N. Van Schaik

Neurology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 93 (9) ◽  
pp. e889-e894 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pieter A. Olivier ◽  
Boel De Paepe ◽  
Eleonora Aronica ◽  
Florieke Berfelo ◽  
Roos Colman ◽  
...  

ObjectiveTo determine interrater variability in diagnosing individual muscle biopsy abnormalities and diagnosis.MethodsWe developed a scoring tool to analyze consensus in muscle biopsy reading of an ad hoc workgroup of international experts. Twenty-four samples from patients with suspected idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM) were randomly selected, providing sections that were stained with standard histologic and immunohistochemical methods. Sections were made available on an online platform, and experts were queried about myopathologic features within 4 pathologic domains: muscle fibers, inflammation, connective tissue, and vasculature. A short clinical presentation of cases was included, and experts were asked to give a tentative diagnosis of polymyositis, dermatomyositis, inclusion-body myositis, antisynthetase syndrome–related myositis, immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy, nonspecific myositis, or other disease. Fleiss κ values, scoring interrater variability, showed the highest agreement within the muscle fiber and connective tissue domains.ResultsDespite overall low κ values, moderate agreement was achieved for tentative diagnosis, supporting the idea of using holistic muscle biopsy interpretation rather than adding up individual features.ConclusionThe assessment of individual pathologic features needs to be standardized and harmonized and should be measured for sensitivity and specificity for subgroup classification. Standardizing the process of diagnostic muscle biopsy reading would allow identification of more homogeneous patient cohorts for upcoming treatment trials.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
E Bollache ◽  
AT Huber ◽  
J Lamy ◽  
E Afari ◽  
TM Bacoyannis ◽  
...  

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: None. Background. Recent studies revealed the ability of MRI T1 mapping to characterize myocardial involvement in both idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM) and acute viral myocarditis (AVM), as compared to healthy controls. However, neither myocardial T1 nor T2 maps were able to discriminate between IIM and AVM patients, when considering conventional myocardial mean values and derived indices such as lambda and extracellular volume. Purpose. To investigate the ability of T1 mapping-derived texture analysis to differentiate IIM from AVM. Methods. Forty patients, 20 with IIM (51 ± 17 years, 9 men) and 20 with AVM (34 ± 13 years, 16 men) underwent 1.5T MRI T1 mapping using a modified Look-Locker inversion-recovery sequence before and 15 minutes after injection of a gadolinium contrast agent. After manual delineation of endocardial and epicardial borders and co-registration of all inversion time images, native and post-contrast T1 maps were estimated. Myocardial texture analysis was performed on native T1 maps. Textural features such as: autocorrelation, contrast, dissimilarity, energy and sum entropy were used to build a least squares-based linear regression model. Finally, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was used to investigate the ability of such texture features score to classify IIM vs. AVM patients, compared to the performance of mean myocardial T1. A Wilcoxon rank-sum test was also used to test difference significance between groups. Results. Both native and post-contrast mean myocardial T1 values were comparable between IIM (native: 1022 ± 43 ms; post-contrast: 319 ± 44 ms) and AVM (1056 ± 59 ms, p = 0.07; 318 ± 35 ms, p = 0.90, respectively) groups. Results of ROC analyses are provided in the Table, indicating that a better discrimination between IIM and AVM patients was obtained when using texture features, with higher AUC and accuracy than mean T1 values (Figure). Conclusion. Texture analysis derived from MRI T1 maps without contrast agent injection was able to discriminate between IIM and AVM with higher accuracy, sensitivity and specificity than conventional T1 indices. Such analysis could provide a useful myocardial signature to help diagnose and manage cardiac alterations associated with IIM in patients presenting with myocarditis and primarily suspected of AVM. Table Area under curve (AUC) Accuracy Sensitivity Specificity Native T1 0.67 0.70 0.65 0.75 Post-contrast T1 0.49 0.60 0.25 0.95 Texture features score 0.85 0.82 0.90 0.75 ROC analyses for classification between IIM and AVM patients Abstract Figure


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