Publication | Closed Access
ACUTE INFANTILE SPINAL MUSCULAR ATROPHY
101
Citations
0
References
1990
Year
AnatomySpinal DisorderOrthopaedic SurgeryMuscle InjurySkeletal MuscleNeurologyPediatric SpineNeuropathologyHealth SciencesSpinal Cord InjuryMuscle Cell ApoptosisNeuromuscular PathologyNeuromuscular DisordersPhysiologyPediatricsDegenerative DiseaseSpinal Muscular AtrophyMedicineNeuromusculoskeletal Disorder
Biopsy as well as autopsy studies of a child who died 8 weeks after birth from the acute infantile form of spinal muscular atrophy revealed classical morphological changes, including degeneration and loss of motoneurons in the spinal cord, loss of large myelinated fibres in anterior roots and neurogenic atrophy in muscle. New ultrastructural findings include massive muscle cell elimination by apoptosis with the formation of membrane-bound muscle cell fragments, apoptotic bodies. In addition, numerous immature muscle fibres were observed. The morphological findings raise the possibility that in a severely growth-retarded muscle, the process of muscle cell apoptosis removes the peripheral target of anterior horn cells resulting in secondary motoneuron death.