Vandekerckhove Ines, Van den Hauwe Marleen, Dewit Tijl, Molenberghs Geert, Goemans Nathalie, De Waele Liesbeth, Van Campenhout Anja, De Groote Friedl, Desloovere Kaat
Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Department of Child Neurology, University Hospital Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
PLoS One. 2025 Mar 18;20(3):e0307007. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0307007. eCollection 2025.
Insights into the progression of muscle impairments in growing boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) remain incomplete due to the frequent oversight of normal maturation as a confounding factor, thereby restricting the delineation of sole pathological processes.
To establish longitudinal trajectories for a comprehensive integrated set of muscle impairments, including muscle weakness, contractures and muscle size alterations, while correcting for normal maturation, in DMD.
Thirty-three boys with DMD (aged 4.3-17 years) were included. Fixed dynamometry, goniometry, and 3D freehand ultrasound were used to repeatedly assess lower limb muscle strength, passive range of motion (ROM) and muscle size, resulting in 161, 178 and 64 assessments for the strength, ROM and ultrasound dataset, respectively. To account for natural strength development, ROM reduction, and muscle growth in growing children, muscle outcomes were converted to unit-less z-scores calculated in reference to typically developing (TD) peers. This allows the interpretation of the muscle outcomes as deficits or alterations with respect to TD. Mixed-effect models estimated the longitudinal change in muscle impairments.
At 4.3-4.9 years of age, all muscle strength outcomes and several ROMs (i.e., dorsiflexion, hamstrings, and hip extension) showed deficits relative to TD, while m. medial gastrocnemius size was increased. Most muscle outcomes remained stable or slightly improved until the ages of 6.6-9.4 years (except knee flexion strength). After this period, muscle strength (-0.27 to -0.45 z-score/year; p < 0.0044), dorsiflexion ROM (-0.23 to -0.33 z-score/year; p < 0.0007), m. medial gastrocnemius size (-0.56 z-score/year; p = 0.0022), and m. rectus femoris size (-0.36 z-score/year; p = 0.0054) declined.
The current study established longitudinal trajectories of muscle impairments in boys with DMD. The results provided enriched history data and revealed promising outcome measures that could enhance the detection of the efficacy of novel therapeutic strategies. Future studies are necessary to validate these outcomes.
由于常将正常发育视为混杂因素而被忽视,对患有杜氏肌营养不良症(DMD)的成长中男孩肌肉损伤进展的认识仍不完整,从而限制了对单一病理过程的描述。
在DMD中,校正正常发育的同时,建立一套包括肌肉无力、挛缩和肌肉大小改变的综合肌肉损伤的纵向轨迹。
纳入33名患有DMD的男孩(年龄4.3 - 17岁)。使用固定测力计、测角仪和三维徒手超声反复评估下肢肌肉力量、被动活动范围(ROM)和肌肉大小,分别获得161次、178次和64次力量、ROM和超声数据集评估。为了考虑成长中儿童的自然力量发展、ROM降低和肌肉生长,将肌肉结果转换为相对于正常发育(TD)同龄人计算的无单位z分数。这使得可以将肌肉结果解释为相对于TD的缺陷或改变。混合效应模型估计肌肉损伤的纵向变化。
在4.3 - 4.9岁时,所有肌肉力量结果和几个ROM(即背屈、腘绳肌和髋关节伸展)相对于TD显示出缺陷,而腓肠肌内侧肌大小增加。直到6.6 - 9.4岁,大多数肌肉结果保持稳定或略有改善(膝关节屈曲力量除外)。在此之后,肌肉力量(-0.27至-0.45 z分数/年;p < 0.0044)、背屈ROM(-0.23至-0.33 z分数/年;p < 0.0007)、腓肠肌内侧肌大小(-0.56 z分数/年;p = 0.0022)和股直肌大小(-0.36 z分数/年;p = 0.0054)下降。
本研究建立了DMD男孩肌肉损伤的纵向轨迹。结果提供了丰富的历史数据,并揭示了有前景的结局指标,可增强对新型治疗策略疗效的检测。未来研究有必要验证这些结果。