Abstract

The incidence of elevated serum creatine kinase (CK) and pyruvate kinase (PK) activities was compared in 20 definite carriers of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), 47 possible carriers, and 42 female controls. When adult age was not regarded as a variable, 70% of the definite carriers had elevated PK, 55% had elevated CK, and 75% had elevated PK or elevated CK or both, 38% of the possible carriers had elevated PK, 19% had elevated CK, and 40% had elevated PK or elevated CK or both. The detection efficiency of the CK test was influenced by the age of the subjects: the upper normal limit of serum CK in the adult controls was at the minimum between 21 and 35 years of age, and CK activity in some carriers declined from elevated to normal levels with increasing age. With these considerations, 70% of definite carriers had elevated CK and 80% had elevated PK and/or CK; 34% of the possible carriers had elevated CK and 43% had elevated PK and/or CK. On the basis of the PK and CK measurements, only 16 of 24 possible carrier mothers were likely to be DMD carriers, implying that the other 8 were non-carrier mothers of new mutant sons.

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