Department of Neurology, Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Ramat Gan, Israel.
Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Ann Clin Transl Neurol. 2024 Nov;11(11):2866-2876. doi: 10.1002/acn3.52194. Epub 2024 Sep 9.
Neuromuscular evaluation increasingly employs muscle ultrasonography to determine muscle thickness, mean grayscale echointensity, and visual semiquantitative echotexture attenuation. However, these measures provide low sensitivity for detection of mild muscle abnormality. Exercise-induced intramuscular blood flow is a physiologic phenomenon, which may be impaired in mildly affected muscles, particularly in dystrophinopathies, and may indicate functional muscle ischemia. We aimed to determine if muscle blood flow is reduced in patients with neuromuscular disorders and preserved muscle strength, and if it correlates with echointensity and digital echotexture measurements.
Peak exercise-induced blood flow, echointensity, and echotexture were quantified in the elbow flexor muscles of 15 adult patients with Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) and 13 patients with other muscular dystrophies (OMD). These were compared to 17 patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1 (CMT1) neuropathy and 21 healthy adults from a previous study.
Muscle blood flow was reduced in all patient groups compared to controls, most prominently in BMD patients (p < 0.0001). Echointensity was similarly increased in all patient groups (p < 0.05), while echotexture was reduced only in muscular dystrophy patients (p ≤ 0.002). In BMD, blood flow correlated with echotexture (Pearson r = 0.6098, p = 0.0158) and strength (Spearman r = 0.5471; p = 0.0370). In patients with normal muscle strength, reduced muscle blood flow was evident in all patient groups (p < 0.001), echotexture was reduced in BMD and OMD (p < 0.01), and echointensity was increased in CMT (p < 0.05).
Muscle blood flow is a sensitive measure to detect abnormality, even in muscles with normal strength. Increased echointensity may indicate a neurogenic disorder when strength is preserved, while low echotexture suggests a dystrophic disease.
神经肌肉评估越来越多地采用肌肉超声来确定肌肉厚度、平均灰度回声强度和视觉半定量回声衰减。然而,这些测量方法对于检测轻度肌肉异常的敏感性较低。运动引起的肌肉内血流是一种生理现象,在受影响较轻的肌肉中可能会受损,尤其是在肌营养不良症中,这可能表明存在功能性肌肉缺血。我们旨在确定在肌肉力量正常但存在神经肌肉疾病的患者中,肌肉血流量是否减少,以及它是否与回声强度和数字回声纹理测量相关。
在 15 名贝克型肌营养不良症(BMD)成年患者和 13 名其他肌营养不良症(OMD)患者的肘屈肌中量化了峰值运动引起的血流、回声强度和回声纹理,并将其与 17 名 Charcot-Marie-Tooth 型 1 型(CMT1)神经病患者和 21 名来自先前研究的健康成年人进行了比较。
与对照组相比,所有患者组的肌肉血流量均减少,BMD 患者最为明显(p<0.0001)。所有患者组的回声强度均相似增加(p<0.05),而回声纹理仅在肌营养不良症患者中降低(p≤0.002)。在 BMD 中,血流与回声纹理(Pearson r=0.6098,p=0.0158)和强度(Spearman r=0.5471;p=0.0370)相关。在肌肉力量正常的患者中,所有患者组的肌肉血流均减少(p<0.001),BMD 和 OMD 中的回声纹理降低(p<0.01),CMT 中的回声强度增加(p<0.05)。
即使在肌肉力量正常的情况下,肌肉血流也是检测异常的敏感指标。当肌肉力量保留时,回声强度增加可能表明存在神经源性疾病,而回声纹理降低则提示存在肌营养不良症。