A quantitatives assessment of the pathological changes in extraocular muscle is presented in 8 patients with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO). Serial cross-sections of extraocular muscle were stained with a battery of histochemical and immunohistochemical techniques and compared with 36 normal extraocular muscles and 1 muscle from a patient who had longstanding third nerve plasy with anomalous reinnervation. Several of the patients had a striking increase in the number of ragged-red fibers in extraocular muscle, particularly if frequent ragged-red fibers also were found on limb muscle biopsy. One patients demonstrated extrajunctional acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in a small percentage of fibers, although this finding was not present in the reinnervated muscle. Numerous darkly staining central regions were noted in the ocular muscle fibers of a patient with Stephens syndrome (CPEO, peripheral neuropathy, and cerebellar disease) and in the reinnervated muscle. A patient with myotubular myopathy had single central nuclei in both limb and ocular muscle. All patients demonstrated in their extraocular muscles variation in both the size and distribution of each of the three histochemical fiber types. Extraocular muscle biopsy proved to be a safe, reliable technique. As a similar quantitative analysis is applied to the study of further patients, a better understanding of the pathogenesis of CPEO should be possible.
Myotube-like structures were seen in extraocular and limb muscles in an adult with centronuclear myopathy. The limb-muscle fibers were very small and were of a uniform histochemical type. Extrajunctional acetylcholine receptors were not seen with immunoperoxidase stains, and ultrastructurally normal neuromuscular junctions were seen in the extraocular-muscle samples. Further studies on developing muscle are needed to identify possible mechanisms of arrest of muscle maturation.
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