Note: the following material is for personal use only see below for


Drugs causing myositis (by mechanism)



Download 3.95 Mb.
Page10/73
Date30.04.2018
Size3.95 Mb.
#47014
1   ...   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   ...   73

Drugs causing myositis (by mechanism)

Inflammatory

L-dopa, procainamide, cimetidine, D-penicillamine, L-tryptophan,
Non-inflammatory necrotizing or vacuolar

cholesterol-lowering agents, chloroquine, colchicine, emetine, aminocaproic acid, labetalol, cyclosporine and tacrolimus, isoretinoic acid (vitamin A analog), vincristine, alcohol


Rhabdomyolysis and myoglobinuria

cholesterol-lowering drugs, alcohol, heroin, amphetamine, toluene, cocaine, aminocaproic acid, pentazocine, phencyclidine


Malignant hyperthermia

halothane, ethylene, diethyl ether, methoxyflurane, ethyl chloride, trichloroethylene, gallamine, succinylcholine


Mitochondrial

Zidovudine (AZT)


Myotonia

2,4- d-chlorophenoxyacetic acid, anthracene-9-carboxycyclic acid, cholesterol-lowering drugs, chloroquine, cyclosporine


Myosin loss

non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents, IV steroids



Drugs causing myopathy (painful vs. painless)



Painless

Alcohol (chronic), steroids

Myoglobinuria

CNS depressants, CNS stimulants, CO, cyanide, arsenic, snake venom

Hypokalemia

Diuretics, laxatives, licorice, carbenoxolone, ampho B, toluene, alcohol


Painful

Inflammatory

Procainamide, phenytoin, levodopa, interferon alpha, cimetidine, leuprolide, PTU, penicillamine

Mitochondrial

AZT, germanium

Drugs of abuse

Alcohol, cocaine, heroin, PCP, volatile chemicals
Focal myopathy

IM injections, IVDA, cephalothin, lidocaine, diazepam, pethidine, pentazocine, meperidine, antibiotics in children


Other

Alcohol (acute), NMJ blockers (vecuronium, pancuronium), lovastatin < simvastatin, clofibrate, gemfibrozil, aminocaproic acid, excess vitamin E, etritinate, ipecac, emetine (overuse), organophosphates (acute poisoning), toxic oil syndrome, eosinophilia myalgias syndrome, snake venom (peak at 24-48 hrs)



Chronic Alcohol Myopathy


Painless, progressive proximal muscle weakness / ½ of alcoholics / damage is cumulative, but strength often restored after cessation

Histology: type 2b fiber atrophy, no necrosis

Acute Alcohol Myopathy


Weak, painful, swollen muscles and cramps / may be limited to only one limb or muscle

in most cases, cramps resolve in 1-2 days, pain and swelling takes 1-2 weeks, strength normal in 10-14 days / can develop rhabdomyolysis / lag time between alcohol consumption and elevated CK (several indirect mechanisms proposed)



Labs: CK, LDH, myoglobin elevated

Histology: necrosis and myofibrillar disorganization (inflammation is debatable)
Hypokalemia

Severe, painless proximal muscle weakness (no cramps, no swelling) / develops over hours/days / serum K between 1.4 – 2.5 / can cause rhabdomyolysis / complete reversal with K replacement



Labs: CK, AST, aldolase elevated

Histology: vacuolar changes, macrophages, +/- necrosis, regeneration


Steroids (esp. dexamethasone, triamcinolone)

Symmetrical, proximal muscle weakness / lower > upper / occasionally myalgias / may have generalized weakness, atrophy (severe cases) / very unlikely with < 10 mg/day or alternate day dosing


Chronic Steroids

Usually > 3 weeks / usually with other stigmata of steroids use



Labs: CK usually normal / EMG shows normal rest activity, short-duration, low-amplitude motor units / Histology: type II atrophy, increased glycogen in type II fibers, lipid droplets in Type I fibers / EM shows sarcolemmal projections, vesicular bodies

High-dose steroids


Can occur 1-2 days after treatment / often seen when treating severe asthma / may be generalized / may involve respiratory muscles / additional risk factors such as NMJ blockers, sepsis / near total recovery in weeks

Histology: changes in both fiber types, vacuolar changes, regenerating fibers / normal EMG
Licorice, carbenoxolone

Pseudo-hyperaldosteronism / Na retention, edema, hypokalemia


Chloroquine

Usually starts in legs / takes 6 months to occur / may also have neuropathy



EMG shows fibrillations, positive waves, occasionally myotonic discharges

Histology: degeneration and acid phosphatase positive vacuoles in up to 50% of fibers / type I fibers predominantly affected / EM shows myeloid bodies and curvilinear bodies similar to neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis

Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil) is supposed to be safer, but I suspect the findings are similar


Amiodarone

may occur as early as 1 month / also get peripheral neuropathy, tremor, ataxia


Perhexilene

Anti-anginal agent / myopathy usually with long-term use only (reported as soon as 2 weeks, associated with rash, resolved with discontinuation

Other side effects include weight loss, hypoglycemia, hepatic dysfunction, peripheral neuropathy

Colchicines

Note: sometimes misdiagnosed for polymyositis

Sensory or motor nerve conduction is low-amplitude or absent

EMG shows fibrillations, positive waves, myopathic motor units

Histology: vacuolar myopathy


Vincristine

Histology: segmental necrosis, phagocytosis, spheromembranous degeneration / probably can have myopathy without neuropathy



Zidovudine (AZT)

Mechanism: ?false substrate for mitochondrial DNA polymerase

Dose-related proximal muscle weakness and myalgias with pronounced wasting / elevated CK / usually improves with discontinuation

Histology: ragged RED fibers / rod-body formation, necrosis, microvacuolization / EM has various changes

Cannot always distinguish from HIV myositis
Lovastatin

Rapidly progressive, necrotizing myopathy / weakness, myalgias, CK 8000-30,000 / can lead to rhabdomyolysis / incidence of 0.5% (compare to incidence of elevated LFT of 2%) / risk increased with combination of lovastatin, gemfibrozil, niacin, immunosuppressive agents

Histology: necrosis

Much less common with Simvastatin


Aminocaproic acid

usu. > 4 wks, can occur as early as several days


Etritinate (dermatology drug)

mild-transient myalgias occur in 15%, do not require discontinuation / occasionally, can be more severe


Synovial fluid analysis



Characteristics

RA

Gout/Pseudogout

Reiter’s/Psoriatic

Septic

OA/Trauma

color

yellow













clarity

cloudy







pus




viscosity

poor













Mucin clot

poor













WBC

3-50 K







> 50 K




% poly

> 70













glucose

10-25% less than serum













protein

> 3.0 g/dl













complement

low













microscopic

RA cells













culture

negative













Download 3.95 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   ...   73




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page