Disintegration of the motor unit in post-polio syndrome. Part II. Electrophysiological findings in patients with post-polio syndrome.

1990 
: The aim of the study is to investigate the motor unit abnormalities in late postpolio muscular atrophy (PPMA) as compared to those found in patients who had polio 20-30 years prior to examination without any new clinical signs. The quantitative concentric needle EMG and a single fiber EMG techniques were employed. Spontaneous activity, the parameters of individual motor units potentials (MUP), number of complex potentials and their stability, jitter and blocking as well as fiber density (FD) have been evaluated. In PPMA patients (5 subjects) we found in newly weakened muscles: spontaneous activity, high percentage of complex potentials, increased jitter, increased FD. The EMG findings in muscles previously affected but without any signs of progression have been similar. In the patients with stable nonprogressing postpolio muscle atrophy (12) all MUP-s parameters indicated changes similar to PPMA but less marked in initially affected muscle with complete or incomplete recovery as well as sometimes in initially clinically unaffected muscles. These findings suggest that the signs of ongoing reinnervation processes persist many years after polio and that PPMA occurring later in life represents disintegration of the previously reinnervated motor units. It is still unclear whether this disintegration depends on decompensation by different factors of fully reinnervated motor units or whether most of the motor units after polio never regained a stable reinnervation.
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