Two unrelated 16-year-old boys had mental retardation, cardiomegaly, and proximal myopathy. One also had hepatomegaly. Histochemistry and electronmicroscopy of muscle biopsies showed lysosomal glycogen storage resembling acid maltase deficiency. Biochemical studies of skeletal muscle showed increased content of glycogen of normal structure; acid alpha-glucosidase activity in both urine and muscle was normal. Other enzymes of glycogen metabolism were also normal. The cause of this apparently generalized glycogenosis with no demonstrable enzyme defect is unknown.
A 20-year-old female hospitalized with status asthmaticus was treated with bronchodilators, antibiotics, and high-dose corticosteroids, and was paralyzed with vecuronium for 10 days to facilitate mechanical ventilation. When this was discontinued, she was found to have a flaccid quadriplegia with areflexia and 4-fold elevation in serum creatine kinase. A muscle biopsy showed extensive loss of thick (myosin) myofilaments, sometimes in core-like distribution, with relative preservation of thin (actin) filaments and Z-discs. Muscle strength returned to normal after 2 months. The pathological lesion in this patient's muscle fibers resemble those in rats treated with high doses of corticosteroids following denervation.
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