Abstract

Lateral gastrocnemius muscle biopsies from a 26-year-old man with hyperkalemic periodic paralysis and a 23-year-old man with hypokalemic periodic paralysis were studied. Both patients came from families in which older relatives had developed a vacuolar myopathy in association with their periodic paralysis. Muscle fibers were chemically skinned, and individual fibers were studied with a low-compliance strain gauge. The tension generated by fibers was studied in baths with calcium concentrations from 10(-8) mol/L to 2.5 x 10(-5) mol/L. The Ca-tension relationships and maximal tensions (normalized to fiber cross-sectional area) of fast and slow twitch fibers were indistinguishable from those found in fibers from 5 normal subjects. The results reinforce earlier findings which suggested that loss of Ca-induced myofibril contraction was not the cause of paralysis in periodic paralysis.

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