We report a Japanese Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) patient with occasional myalgia and cramps during normal activity that developed at the age of 28 months. His family history was negative for neuromuscular diseases. Muscle biopsy analyses, including dystrophin immunostaining, disclosed no clinically relevant findings. The diagnosis of BMD was initially made at the age of 10 years, when indications of persistent high serum levels of CK prompted us to screen deletions in the dystrophin gene by amplification of 19 deletion-prone exons from the genomic DNA by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Among the exons examined, exons 13 and 17 were deleted. To clarify the size of the deletion, the dystrophin transcript was analyzed by reverse transcription PCR. The determined nucleotide sequence of the amplified product encompassing exons 10 to 20 disclosed that the entire segment corresponding to exons 13 to 18 (810 bp) was absent, a deletion that would be expected to cause the production of a dystrophin protein lacking 270 amino acids from the rod domain. This result indicates that occasional myalgia and cramps could be early clinical manifestations of mild BMD, especially in patients who have a deletion in the rod domain, and that deletion screening of the dystrophin gene might be the only reliable method to diagnose such cases.
Most reported cases of familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) involve missense mutations of MEFV concentrated within exon 10. We experienced two independent pedigrees of a unique variant in the MEFV gene that might cause excessive exon 2 skipping due to enhanced alternative splicing. In this study, we tried to elucidate the molecular mechanism of the MEFV variant as a cause of the FMF phenotype. Peripheral blood was obtained from volunteers and two patients with homozygous c.910G>A variant of the MEFV gene. MEFV messenger RNA (mRNA) expression patterns in mononuclear cells and granulocytes were compared using forward and reverse primers from exons 1 and 3, respectively. Expression profiles of pyrin were examined by transfecting wild-type and variant MEFV genes into HEK293T cells. Expression of normal-sized mRNA was extremely reduced in these patients, whereas that of aberrant short mRNA, deleting exon 2 (Δex2), was significantly increased. Immunohistochemical and immunoblotting analyses revealed a truncated immunoreactive pyrin protein in cells transfected with Δex2 cDNA. The MEFV gene c.910G>A variant results in accelerated aberrant splicing with abnormal protein size, presumably leading to anomalous pyrin function. This is the first report to show that an MEFV variant other than missense mutation is responsible for the FMF phenotype.
A 77-year-old woman with a residual right hemiparesis following a subarachnoid hemorrhage was found lying over a bedrail at home. She lived alone, and we suspect that she was reaching for the telephone when she fell over the bedrail. Her right flank was red and swollen. Abdominal computed tomography showed marked swelling of the muscles of the right lateral abdominal wall. She had an established rhabdomyolysis compressed by the bedrail and acute renal failure. This case illustrated bedrail-related rhabdomyolysis caused by abdominal wall injury. The use of bedrails is a risk of the injury for the frail elderly people and should be avoided to prevent bedrail-related injuries. Health professionals should consider home environmental factors so that the frail elderly people can easily move and carry out their daily life activities.
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