Penicillamine‐associated myasthenia gravis
- 1 November 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Neurology
- Vol. 30 (11) , 1246
- https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.30.11.1246
Abstract
Electroneuromyographic studies have been reported as abnormal in only 9 of 23 cases of penicillamine-associated myasthenia gravis (MG). We report a patient with rheumatoid arthritis who developed clinical and electrodiagnostic evidence of myasthenia 7 months after beginning penicillamine therapy. Six months after discontinuing penicillamine, it was possible to discontinue anticholinesterase medications. With clinical improvement, electrodiagnostic studies (including single-fiber electrmyography) improved, serum antibody titers to human muscle acetylcholine receptor fell, and lymphocytes became more responsive to the nonspecific mitogen phytohemagglutinin. Evidence suggests that penicillamine-associated myasthenia is a distinct syndrome rather than the chance occurrence of two diseases. This syndrome is clinically and electrophysiologically distinguishable from idiopathic myasthenia only by the high remission rate after penicillamine is discontinued.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ptosis and Weakness after Start of D-Penicillamine TherapyAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1978
- D-Penicillamine-Induced Myasthenia Gravis in Rheumatoid ArthritisAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1977
- D-Penicillamine-Induced Polymyositis in Rheumatoid ArthritisAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1976
- PENICILLAMINE NEPHROPATHY IN RHEUMATOID-ARTHRITIS - CLINICAL, PATHOLOGICAL AND IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDY1976