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Myopathy:

  • Myopathy denotes non-inflammatory degeneration of skeletal muscle characterized clinically by muscle weakness and pathologically by hyaline degeneration of muscle fibres.
  • Serum activities of some muscle enzymes are elevated and myoglobinuria is common accompainment.

 

Etiology:

  • Most important myopathies in farm animals is due to nutritional deficiency of vitamin E and selenium, and effects of unusual exercise.
  • Skeletal myopathies can be classified into two; primary and secondary myopathies.
  • Enzootic nutritional muscular dystrophy:
    • Deficiency of vitamin E and/or selenium
    • Usually occurs in young calves, lambs, foals and piglets.
    • Factors enhancing disease includes rapid growth, highly unsaturated fatty acid in diet and unusual exercise.
  • Exertional or post-exercise rhabdomyolysis:
    • Occurs as tying up syndrome (Azoturia or equine paralytic myoglobinuria) after unusual exercise or insufficient training
    • It also occurs in cattle after running wildly for several minutes, in sheep chased by dogs and in wildlife during capture of wild animals.
  • Equine atypical myopathy:
    • Hypoglycin A, found in seeds of maple trees.
    • Affected horse has sudden onset of clinical signs
    • It was originally known as atypical myoglobinuria but was renamed to atypical myopathy.
  • Equine polysaccharide storage myopathy:
    • It is metabolic disease recognized in many breed of horse; quarter horse, appaloosa, paint-related horse
    • Mutation in glycogen synthase-I (GYS I) gene affects carbohydrate metabolism
  • Congenital or inherited myopathies:
    • Porcine stress syndrome in some breed of pig
    • Congenital myopathy in Brown-Swiss calves
    • Doubling-muscling in cattle
    • Splay legs of newborn pigs
    • Xanthosis in skeletal muscles and cardiac muscle of cattle
  • Toxic agents:
    • Poisonous plants; Cassia occidentalis, Karwinskia humboldtiana, Ixioloena sps, Geigenia spp
    • Solanum malacoxylon, Tricetum spp, Cetrum spp causes enzootic calcinosis of all tissue
  • Ischemia:
    • Ischemic myonecrosis occurs in thigh muscle of cattle, recumbent for approximately 48 hours
    • Iliac thrombosis is important cause of ischemic myopathy in horse
  • Neurogenic:
    • Traumatic injury to nerve or subsequent degeneration or complete severance of nerve supply to skeletal muscle
    • Suprascapular nerve paralysis (sweeny) in horse results in traumatic neuropathy
  • Neoplasm:
    • Rhabdomyosarcomas are reported in horse
    • Neoplasm of striated muscle are uncommon in animals.

 

Clinical Findings:

Primary myopathy:

  • Sudden onset of weakness
  • Pseudoparalysis of affected muscle
  • Respiratory and circulatory insufficiency
  • Animals are usually bright and alert and appear to be in pain
  • Temperature are usually normal but may be elevated slightly in severe case
  • Tachycardia, myoglobinuria in adult horse, yearling cattle
  • Affected muscle in acute cases may feel swollen, hard and rubbery
  • Animals with acute case may die within 24 hours after onset of signs

 

Acute nutritional myopathy:

  • Occurs most commonly in foals from birth to 7 months of age
  • Muscle stiffness and pain
  • Myoglobinuria, edema of head and neck
  • Recumbency, death within few days

 

Myopathy associated with excessive exercise or running at pasture:

  • Dejection, stiffness
  • Disinclination to move
  • Stiffness of gait
  • Pronounced swelling and firmness of subcutaneous tissue at base of mane and over gluteal muscle
  • Excessive salivation
  • Desquamation of lingual epithelium
  • Board-like firmness of masseter muscle
  • Foals are unable to suck milk because of inability to bend their necks

 

Tying up:

  • Sudden onset of muscle soreness; 10-20 minutes following exercise
  • Profuse sweating
  • Degree of soreness varies from mild to severe
  • In mild case; horse move with short, shuffling gait
  • In acute case; great disinclination to move at all
  • In severe case; horse unable to move their hindlegs, swelling and rigidity of croup muscle
  • Myoglobinuria is common.

 

Post-anesthetic myositis:

  • Horse may experience difficulty during recovery from anesthesia
  • Prolonged recovery, when initial attempts made to stand, there is lumbar rigidity, pain, reluctance to bear weight
  • Limbs are rigid, and muscles are firm on palpation
  • In severe cases, temperature rises
  • Other signs include; anxiety, tachycardia, profuse sweating, myoglobinuria, tachypnea
  • Death may occur in 6-12 hours

 

Exertional rhabdomyolysis:

  • Recurrent stiff gait after exercise in young horse
  • Short-stepping gait and poor performance
  • Horse are reluctant to move when placed in stall, apphrensive and anorexia
  • Frequent shifting of weight
  • Hard and painful muscle, profuse sweating, refuse to walk, tachycardia and tachypnea in severely affected horse
  • Consistent abdominal pain
  • Deep-red or coffee-coloured urine

Equine polysaccharide storage myopathy:

  • Pain, weakness
  • Segmental fibre necrosis
  • Stiffness, spasm, atrophy of muscle
  • Most commonly affected muscle are powerful rump, thigh and back muscles, including gluteals, semimembranosus, semitendinosus and longissimus.

 

Exertional rhabdomyolysis:

  • In sheep chased by dogs, affected animals are recumbent, cannot stand and appear exhausted.
  • Myoglobinuria is common
  • Death usually follows

 

Hyperkalemic periodic paralysis:

  • Initially, there is brief period of myotonia with prolapse of third eyelid
  • In severe case, horses become recumbent
  • Myotonia is replaced by flaccidity
  • Generalized muscle fasciculations with large group of muscle fibre contracting simultaneously at random
  • Animals remain bright and alert and responds to noise and painful stimuli
  • In mild case; affected horse remain standing and generalized muscle fasciculations are prominent over neck, shoulder and flank
  • Tendency to stand base-wide
  • Horse are unable to lift its head, usually will not eat and may yawn repeatedly early in course of disease.

Secondary myopathy from ischemia:

  • Affected animals are unable to rise.
  • Affected hindlegs are directed behind cow in frog-leg attitude.
  • Appetite and mental attitude are usually normal.
  • In calves with aortic and iliac artery thrombosis, there is acute onset of paresis or flaccid paralysis of one or both pelvic limb.
  • Affected limbs are hypothermic and have diminished spinal reflexes and arterial pulse pressure.

 

Neurogenic atrophy:

  • Marked loss of total muscle mass
  • Flaccid paralysis
  • Loss of tendon reflexes
  • Failure of regeneration
  • Animal are unable to bear weight on affected leg, if large muscle mass is affected.

 

Dystrophy of diaphragmatic muscle:

  • Loss of appetite
  • Decreased rumination, eructation
  • Recurrent bloat
  • Increased respiratory rate with forced abdominal respiration, forced movement of nostril
  • Death from asphyxia in few weeks

 

Severe diaphragmatic necrosis:

  • Affected horse may have severe respiratory distress and respiratory acidosis
  • Animal donot respond to supportive therapy

 

Diagnosis:

  • Physical examination of affected muscles
  • Clinical pathology:
    • Increased level of serum CK
    • Increased level of AST. It may remain elevated for several days following acute myopathy due to longer half-life
    • CK has short half-life of about 4-6 hours, so enzyme level may return to normal within 3-4 days, if no further degeneration
    • Marked drop in CK activity and slow decline in serum AST suggest that no further degeneration is occurring whereas constant elevation of CK suggest active degeneration.
    • Serum CK values will increase from <100 IU/L to 1000-5000 IU/L or higher
    • In calves, it will increase from 50 IU/L to 5000 IU/L.
  • Muscle biopsy: Open biopsy is recommended to obtain strips of muscle. Semimembranosus, semitendinosus muscle at site between base of tail and tuber ischium provides adequate sample.
  • Myoglobinuria: Level > 40mg/dl of urine produces dark coffee colored urine. Urine also test positive for presence of protein
  • Electromyography: For evaluation of degree of neurogenic atrophy
  • Necropsy Findings:
    • Affected areas of skeletal muscle have white, waxy, swollen appearance like fish flesh
    • Hyaline degeneration to severe myonecrosis histologically
    • Calcification of affected tissue

Treatment:

  • Vitamin E and selenium supplementation should be made.
  • In acidosis, sodium bicarbonate should be administered.
  • Animal should be provided rest and thick bedding with hay straws, removal of solid floors to softer ground, frequent turning from side to side
  • Animal should be provided fluid therapy to prevent myoglobinuric nephrosis
  • Analgesic drugs are recommended in case of pain.
  • Dantrolene sodium at 4 mg/kg body weight (BW) given orally immediately upon recognition of clinical signs is efficacious.
  • Large quantities of intravenous polyionic balanced electrolyte fluids (50 to 100 L) must be given over a 24-hour period.
  • Prevention of porcine stress syndrome will depend on careful handling and transportation techniques combined with genetic selection of resistant pigs.
  • The prevention of exertional myopathy in the horse depends on a progressive training program and avoidance of sudden unaccustomed exercise in animals that are in good body condition and have been inactive.
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