학술논문

Development and Preliminary Validation of an Electromyography-Scoring Protocol for the Assessment and Grading of Muscle Involvement in Patients With Juvenile Idiopathic Inflammatory Myopathies.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Pediatric Neurology. Nov2021, Vol. 124, p6-10. 5p.
Subject
*MUSCLE diseases
*MYOSITIS
*MOTOR unit
*BLOOD sedimentation
*CREATINE kinase
*JUVENILE diseases
*PILOT projects
*SKELETAL muscle
*POLYMYOSITIS
*DERMATOMYOSITIS
*MEDICAL protocols
*ELECTROMYOGRAPHY
RESEARCH evaluation
Language
ISSN
0887-8994
Abstract
Introduction: We performed a pilot study in order to investigate the feasibility of an electromyography (EMG)-scoring protocol for the assessment of disease activity in juvenile idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (JIIM).Methods: Children with JIIM followed up in a tertiary-level care center underwent standardized clinical, laboratory, and EMG assessment. An EMG-scoring protocol was devised by a consensus panel including a pediatric neurophysiologist and two pediatric rheumatologists, based on a combined score obtained as the sum of (1) the presence of denervation signs (fibrillation potentials) and (2) motor unit remodeling (mixed pattern of short- and long-duration motor unit action potentials). The EMG-scoring protocol was then validated following the Outcome Measures in Rheumatoid Arthritis Clinical Trials filter for outcome measures in rheumatology and the consensus-based standards for the selection of health measurement instruments methodology.Results: Thirteen children (77% females) were included in the study, with a median age of 10 years (interquartile range: 7-17 years) and median disease duration of 11.8 months (interquartile range: 2.1-44.5). A total of 39 EMG examinations were evaluated. A strong positive association between a standardized tool for muscle strength assessment and the combined score was observed. No significant associations were found with both creatine kinase and erythrocyte sedimentation rate levels.Discussion: Our EMG-scoring protocol is the first standardized and reproducible tool for the neurophysiologic evaluation and grading of muscle involvement in patients with JIIM and could provide relevant additional information in the assessment and follow-up of these rare conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]