Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s12883-021-02473-5...

Author
Liu, Jingwen Li, Yi Niu, Jingwen Zhang, Lei Fan, Jing Guan, Yuzhou Cui, Liying Liu, Mingsheng
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Neurology

Year

2021

listing date

12/8/2022

Keywords
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis fasciculation ultrasonography peripheral neuropathy diagnosis als non-als mus muscle patients fasciculation
Metrics

Abstract

Background Fasciculation is an important sign for the diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

Our study aimed to analyze the difference in fasciculation detected with muscle ultrasonography (MUS) between ALS patients and non-ALS patients with symptoms resembling ALS.

Methods Eighty-eight ALS patients and fifty-four non-ALS (eight multifocal motor neuropathy, 32 chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy/Charcot-Marie-Tooth, and 14 cervical spondylopathy or lumbar spondylopathy) patients were recruited.

MUS was performed on 19 muscle groups in cervical, lumbosacral, bulbar, and thoracic regions for each patient.

The intensity of fasciculation was divided into five grades based on firing frequency and number in the involved muscle groups.

Results The overall detection rates were 72.8% in ALS and 18% in non-ALS patients.

The fasciculation grades (median [IQR]) were 2 (0–3) in ALS and 0 (0–0) in non-ALS patients ( P  < 0.001).

Fasciculations were observed in four regions for ALS patients and primarily distributed in proximal limbs.

Fasciculations in non-ALS patients were primarily low-grade and mostly distributed in distal limbs.

Discussion The fasciculation grade was higher in ALS than non-ALS patients.

The distribution pattern of fasciculation was different between ALS and non-ALS patients.

Conclusions The fasciculation grade and distribution pattern detected with MUS could help distinguish ALS from non-ALS patients.

Liu, Jingwen,Li, Yi,Niu, Jingwen,Zhang, Lei,Fan, Jing,Guan, Yuzhou,Cui, Liying,Liu, Mingsheng, 2021, Fasciculation differences between ALS and non-ALS patients: an ultrasound study, BioMed Central

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