Abstract
We performed single-fiber electromyography (SFEMG) and correlated the results with muscle-biopsy histochemistry in 56 patients with various neuromuscular diseases. Increased muscle-fiber density, delineated by SFEMG, was most prominent in diseases of ordinary denervation, namely motor neuron disorders and peripheral neuropathies, and it correlated with histochemical fiber type grouping. Both phenomena reflect denervation followed by reinnervation. In patients with central core disease and rod disease, fiber density was not increased despite massive type I fiber predominance. The normal distribution of type I fiber subtypes in those patients indicated tht their fiber predominance was not due to sprouting and reinnervation, but probably to paucity of the type II fibers. In type I fiber hypotrophy with central nuclei, fiber density was increased, perhaps attributable to the small diameter and consequent denser packing of the type I fibers. Fiber density was slightly increased in the majority of patients with acid-maltase deficiency, limb-girdle dystrophy, and polymyositis, in nearly half with mitochondrial myopathy, and in 1 older Duchenne dystrophy patient. In these myopathic disorders, myogenous deinnervation (followed by reinnervation) is one possible explanation. Normal fiber density was present in all patients with muscle phosphorylase deficiency, myotonia congenita, and in the hypokalemic periodic paralysis patients under age 40.
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