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. 1992 Apr;38(1):69-76.
doi: 10.1016/0165-1838(92)90218-6.

Deficiency of sympathetic nervous system function in myasthenia

Affiliations

Deficiency of sympathetic nervous system function in myasthenia

E Stoica et al. J Auton Nerv Syst. 1992 Apr.

Abstract

The norepinephrine (NE) and epinephrine (E) responses to forearm ischemia were studied in 24 myasthenic patients and 22 subjects with lumbar disc disease (control group). In some of these myasthenic (11 cases) and control (11 cases) subjects the NE and E responses to orthostasis were also investigated. In controls both stimuli induced a rise in NE urinary excretion without significantly changing the E excretion. On the other hand, in myasthenic patients forearm ischemia and orthostasis were followed by an augmentation in E excretion, the NE excretion remaining unchanged or even undergoing a depression. In other myasthenic patients (10 cases) and subjects with lumbar disc disease (10 cases) NE and E responses to exercise were tested. The results were similar to those presented above: controls reacted to exercise by a rise in NE excretion, while myasthenic patients, by an augmentation in E excretion; the NE excretion underwent no change or even decreased after exercise in myasthenia. The obliteration of NE response to all three testing stimuli found in myasthenic patients may be considered as a sign of their sympathetic deficiency. In such patients the normal E discharge produced by forearm ischemia, orthostasis or exercise may be interpreted as a compensatory reaction, being probably the consequence of sympathetic deficiency. The noradrenergic deficit of myasthenic patients is ascribable to their cholinergic hyperactivity.

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