Possible role of apamin‐sensitive K+ channels in myotonic dystrophy
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Behrens Pellegrino, María Isabel
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Possible role of apamin‐sensitive K+ channels in myotonic dystrophy
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Myotonic muscular dystrophy is a genetic disease characterized mainly by muscle atrophy and myotonia, a repetitive electrical activity of muscle. In the present study, the possible role of apamin‐sensitive K+ channels in the genesis of myotonia was investigated. Apamin is a peptide from bee venom that specifically blocks small conductance Ca2+‐activated K+ channels. The injection of a small amount of apamin (20–30 μl, 10 μmol/L) into the thenar muscle of myotonic dystrophy patients decreased the basal electrical activity during the electromyogram in the 6 patients studied. Myotonic discharges after muscle percussion were more difficult to trigger and of smaller intensity and duration. In 2 controls and in 2 patients with generalized myotonia, as well as in 1 patient with myotonia congenita (where the defect is in chloride channels), apamin had no effect. These results suggest that apamin‐sensitive K+ channels participate in the mechanism that generates myotonia in myotonic dystrophy. ©
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/157066
DOI: 10.1002/mus.880171104
ISSN: 10974598
0148639X
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Muscle & Nerve, Volumen 17, Issue 11, 2018, Pages 1264-1270
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