Abstract
Background: Neurophysiologic biomarkers are needed for clinical trials of therapies for myotonic dystrophy (DM1). We characterized muscle properties, spinal reflexes (H-reflexes), and trans-cortical long-latency reflexes (LLRs) in a cohort with mild/moderate DM1. Methods: Twenty-four people with DM1 and 25 matched controls underwent assessment of tibial nerve H-reflexes and soleus muscle twitch properties. Quadriceps LLRs were elicited by delivering an unexpected perturbation during a single-limb squat (SLS) visuomotor tracking task. Results: DM1 was associated with decreased H-reflex depression. The efficacy of doublet stimulation was enhanced, yielding an elevated double-single twitch ratio. DM1 participants demonstrated greater error during the SLS task. DM1 individuals with the least-robust LLR responses showed the greatest loss of spinal H-reflex depression. Conclusions: DM1 is associated with abnormalities of muscle twitch properties. Co-occurring alterations of spinal and trans-cortical reflex properties underscore the central nervous system manifestations of this disorder and may assist in gauging efficacy during clinical trials.
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Shields, R. K., Lee, J., Buelow, A., Petrie, M., Dudley-Javoroski, S., Cross, S., … Nopoulos, P. C. (2020). Myotonic dystrophy type 1 alters muscle twitch properties, spinal reflexes, and perturbation-induced trans-cortical reflexes. Muscle and Nerve, 61(2), 205–212. https://doi.org/10.1002/mus.26767
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