Abstract

In 1992, a 49-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital because of exertional dyspnea. Three years earlier sarcoidosis had been diagnosed, and the patient was found to have bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy. The eye, skin, and knee joint were also involved. During the second hospital stay, atrial flutter with advanced A-V nodal block, scattered defects on a 201T1 scintigram, and marked cardiomegaly on chest roentgenogram led to the diagnosis of cardiac sarcoidosis. Signs and symptoms of cardiac failure subsided after placement of an artificial cardiac pacemaker, but the patient still complained of mild muscle weakness in the lower extremities on exertion. 67Ga scintigraphy revealed marked accumulation in the lower extremities, and muscle biopsy of the left gastrocnemius revealed numerous epithelioid cell granulomas with muscle fiber degeneration. Oral corticosteroid therapy was effective. A review of the 24 cases of sarcoid myopathy reported in Japan indicated that the male-to-female ratio is 1:3.8. As compared to patients in whom myopathy led to the diagnosis of sarcoidosis, those in whom myopathy developed after sarcoidosis was diagnosed were (1) relatively older, (2) more likely to have multiple organ involvement, and (3) more likely to have cardiac sarcoidosis. Corticosteroids were beneficial in about three quarters of these 16 cases, who received corticosteroid therapy.

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