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Items: 5

1.

Myopathy, proximal, and ophthalmoplegia

Congenital myopathy-6 with ophthalmoplegia (CMYO6) is a relatively mild muscle disorder characterized by childhood onset of symptoms. The disorder is either slowly progressive or nonprogressive, and affected individuals retain ambulation, although there is variable severity. CMYO6 can show both autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive inheritance; the phenotype is similar in both forms (summary by Lossos et al., 2005 and Tajsharghi et al., 2014). For a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of congenital myopathy, see CMYO1A (117000). [from OMIM]

MedGen UID:
381340
Concept ID:
C1854106
Disease or Syndrome
2.

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis type 20

Any amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in which the cause of the disease is a mutation in the HNRNPA1 gene. [from MONDO]

MedGen UID:
811608
Concept ID:
C3715156
Disease or Syndrome
3.

Polyglucosan body myopathy type 2

Polyglucosan body myopathy-2 is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by proximal muscle weakness of the lower limbs resulting in gait disturbances. Some patients also have involvement of the upper limbs and/or distal muscle weakness. The age at onset is highly variable, and the disorder is slowly progressive. Muscle biopsy shows accumulation of polyglucosan, which contains abnormally long and poorly branched glucosyl chains and is variably resistant to digestion by alpha-amylase (summary by Malfatti et al., 2014). For a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of PGBM, see PGBM1 (615895). [from OMIM]

MedGen UID:
863889
Concept ID:
C4015452
Disease or Syndrome
4.

Inclusion body myopathy with early-onset Paget disease with or without frontotemporal dementia 3

Inclusion body myopathy associated with Paget disease of bone (PDB) and/or frontotemporal dementia (IBMPFD) is characterized by adult-onset proximal and distal muscle weakness (clinically resembling a limb-girdle muscular dystrophy syndrome), early-onset PDB, and premature frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Muscle weakness progresses to involve other limb and respiratory muscles. PDB involves focal areas of increased bone turnover that typically lead to spine and/or hip pain and localized enlargement and deformity of the long bones; pathologic fractures occur on occasion. Early stages of FTD are characterized by dysnomia, dyscalculia, comprehension deficits, and paraphasic errors, with minimal impairment of episodic memory; later stages are characterized by inability to speak, auditory comprehension deficits for even one-step commands, alexia, and agraphia. Mean age at diagnosis for muscle disease and PDB is 42 years; for FTD, 56 years. Dilated cardiomyopathy, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and Parkinson disease are now known to be part of the spectrum of findings associated with IBMPFD. [from GeneReviews]

MedGen UID:
815799
Concept ID:
C3809469
Disease or Syndrome
5.

Muscle fiber inclusion bodies

MedGen UID:
867769
Concept ID:
C4022159
Finding
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