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Sporadic inclusion body myositis: morphology, regeneration, and cytoskeletal structure of muscle fibres
  1. S Arnardottir1,
  2. K Borg2,
  3. T Ansved1
  1. 1Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Division of Neurology, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden
  2. 2Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Huddinge University Hospital, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm
  1. Correspondence to:
 Dr Snjolaug Arnardottir
 Department of Neurology, Karolinska Hospital, S-171 76 Stockholm, Sweden; snjolaug.arnardottirks.se

Abstract

Objective: To characterise morphological abnormalities in relation to muscle fibre type in sporadic inclusion body myositis (s-IBM).

Methods: 14 muscle biopsies from 11 patients with s-IBM were characterised for morphological abnormalities and fibre type composition as well as muscle fibre regeneration and cytoskeletal structure, using histochemical and immunohistochemical techniques.

Results: Morphological abnormalities included inflammatory infiltrates and “rimmed vacuoles,” and pronounced variation in fibre size. There were no significant differences in fibre type composition between s-IBM patients and controls based on the myofibrillar ATPase staining. A differential effect on muscle fibre sizes was noted, type II fibres being smaller in the s-IBM patients than in the controls. Conversely, the mean type I muscle fibre diameter in the s-IBM patients was larger than in the controls, though this difference was not significant. An ongoing intense regeneration process was present in s-IBM muscle, as indicated by the expression of neonatal myosin heavy chain, vimentin, and CD56 (Leu-19) in most of the muscle fibres. The cytoskeletal proteins dystrophin and desmin were normally expressed in s-IBM muscle fibres that were not undergoing degeneration or regeneration.

Conclusions: There are extensive morphological and morphometric alterations in s-IBM, affecting different muscle fibre types in different ways. The cytoskeletal structure of type I and II muscle fibres remains unaffected in different stages of the disease.

  • inclusion body myositis
  • cytoskeletal structure
  • muscle fibre regeneration
  • myosin heavy chain
  • CMT, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease
  • CP, cricopharyngeus muscle
  • mATPase, myofibrillar ATPase
  • MCSA, mean cross sectional area
  • MHCf, fast myosin
  • MHCn, neonatal myosin
  • MHCs, slow myosin
  • s-IBM, sporadic inclusion body myositis
  • TA, tibialis anterior muscle
  • VA, vastus lateralis muscle

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests: none declared