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Symptoms

Glycolytic Defects

Lipid Defects

Mitochondrial Myopathies

Pathophysiology

Inheritance

Other
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Metabolic Myopathy Conditions
Source: Ronald G. Haller, MD
Metabolic myopathies include inherited
disorders of muscle fat, carbohydrate, and mitochondrial
muscle metabolism.
The major energy sources for muscle contraction are glycogen,
glucose and fatty acids, whose metabolic pathways converge
as acetyl-CoA for final intramitochondrial oxidation through
the Krebs cycle and the respiratory chain. Defects of substrate
utilization in muscle cause two main clinical presentations:
(1) Acute, recurrent, reversible muscle dysfunction, manifesting
as exercise intolerance, myalgia with or without painful
cramps (contractures), often culminating in muscle breakdown
and myoglobinuria; or (2) Fixed, often progressive weakness,
sometimes simulating dystrophic or neurogenic processes.
Glycolytic defects refer to disorders that interfere with
the breakdown of glycogen or glucose; Lipid disorders refer
to defects in the breakdown of long chain fatty acid; and
mitochondrial disorders to defects that impair both carbohydrate
and lipid metabolism.
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