At the age of five years a male child started to develop a progressive rigid spine,
torsion scoliosis, and flexion contractures of his elbows, knees, hips, and ankles
owing to severe proximal and distal muscle weakness. He had three muscle biopsies
from three different muscles at ages 7, 11, and 14 years, respectively. Myopathologically,
these muscle tissues contained numerous inclusions which, at the ultrastructural level,
turned out to be reducing bodies and cytoplasmic bodies, often in close spatial proximity.
Similar histological inclusions, although not further identified by histochemistry
and electron microscopy, were seen in his maternal grandmother's biopsied muscle tissue
who had developed weakness of the legs and hands after the age of 50 years. The patient's
parents were healthy, but the mother's quadriceps muscle showed an increased spectrum
of muscle fibre diameters. Our patient, thus, had a neuromuscular disorder, perhaps
familial, presenting as a mixed congenital myopathy, i.e., reducing body myopathy
with cytoplasmic bodies, of which the morphological lesions could be consistently
documented over several years in his different limb muscles. While other mixed congenital
myopathies had shown cores and rods, both related to sarcomeres and thus possibly
morphogenetically related, cytoplasmic bodies thought to be related to Z-bands and
reducing bodies dissimilar to any muscle fibre constituent do not share any common
denominator. Therefore, we suggest that this neuromuscular disorder may be a unique
mixed congenital myopathy, either sporadic or genetic. In the latter case, the transmission
pattern suggested X-linked recessive inheritance, but an autosomal-dominant transmission
with variable penetrance could not be ruled out.
Key words
Congenital myopathy - Reducing body myopathy - Cytoplasmic bodies - Desmin - Rigid
spine - Mixed myopathy
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Prof. Dr. Hans H. Goebel
Department of Neuropathology
Medical Center
Johannes Gutenberg University
Langenbeckstrasse 1
55131 Mainz
Germany
Email: goebel@neuropatho.klinik.uni-mainz.de