Inflammatory Myopathies: Overview - Muscle Under Siege
- Acquired, immune-mediated disorders causing chronic muscle inflammation and progressive weakness.
- Hallmarks: Symmetrical proximal muscle weakness, elevated creatine kinase (CK), characteristic electromyography (EMG) and muscle biopsy findings.
- Broad classification:
- Dermatomyositis (DM): Characteristic skin rash.
- Polymyositis (PM): Muscle inflammation without rash.
- Inclusion Body Myositis (IBM): Affects distal muscles, older adults.
- Immune-Mediated Necrotizing Myopathy (IMNM): Minimal inflammation, prominent necrosis.
⭐ Gottron's papules (on knuckles) and heliotrope rash (eyelids) are pathognomonic for Dermatomyositis.

Dermatomyositis (DM) - Rash & Rhabdo
- Autoimmune: progressive symmetrical proximal muscle weakness + pathognomonic skin rashes.
- Rash (Key Features):
- Heliotrope rash (purplish edematous eyelids)
- Gottron's papules (violaceous papules on knuckles, extensor surfaces)
- Shawl sign (erythema: shoulders, upper back)
- V-sign (erythema: anterior neck, chest)
- Muscle (Rhabdo Risk):
- Symmetrical proximal weakness (difficulty rising, combing hair)
- Myalgia, dysphagia
- ↑↑CK (indicates muscle damage, rhabdomyolysis risk)
- Antibodies: Anti-Mi-2 (classic DM), Anti-Jo-1 (ILD, mechanic's hands), Anti-TIF1-γ (↑ malignancy risk).
- Biopsy: Perifascicular atrophy is hallmark.
- Associations: Malignancy (crucial to screen!), Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD).

⭐ Adult-onset DM carries a significant malignancy risk; Anti-TIF1-γ antibody strongly predicts this. Thorough screening is vital.
Polymyositis (PM) & IMNM - Pure Muscle Maelstrom
- Polymyositis (PM):
- Symmetrical proximal muscle weakness (pelvic, shoulder girdle); insidious onset.
- No skin rash (key differentiator from Dermatomyositis).
- Pathology: Endomysial inflammation; CD8+ T-cell mediated muscle fiber injury.
- Labs: ↑ CK, aldolase. EMG: myopathic changes.
- Antibodies: Anti-Jo-1 (part of anti-synthetase syndrome), Anti-SRP.
- Immune-Mediated Necrotizing Myopathy (IMNM):
- Acute/subacute severe proximal muscle weakness; often more severe than PM.
- Markedly ↑ CK (often >50x ULN).
- Pathology: Muscle fiber necrosis with minimal or no inflammatory infiltrate.
- Antibodies: Anti-SRP, Anti-HMGCR (often statin-associated).
⭐ Anti-HMGCR antibodies are highly specific for statin-associated IMNM, which can persist even after statin discontinuation.
- General Treatment: Corticosteroids, immunosuppressants (e.g., methotrexate, azathioprine).
Inclusion Body Myositis (IBM) - Distinctly Different Decline
- Most common inflammatory myopathy in patients >50 years; male predominance.
- Onset: Insidious. Course: Progressive. Pattern: Asymmetric weakness.
- Hallmark: Weakness of finger flexors (esp. deep) & quadriceps.
- Dysphagia is frequent.
- Muscle Biopsy: Endomysial inflammation (CD8+ T cells), rimmed vacuoles, inclusions (TDP-43, p62, amyloid).
- CK: Normal or mildly elevated.
- Generally refractory to immunosuppressive therapy.

⭐ Profound, often asymmetric, weakness of quadriceps and finger flexors is highly suggestive, especially in elderly males.
Myopathies: Dx & Rx - Solve & Soothe
- Diagnosis (Dx):
- Clinical: Symmetrical proximal muscle weakness, dysphagia. Skin signs in Dermatomyositis (DM).
- Labs: ↑CK, ↑Aldolase. Specific autoantibodies (Anti-Jo-1, Anti-Mi-2, Anti-SRP).
- EMG: Myopathic pattern (short duration, small amplitude units).
- Muscle Biopsy: Gold standard; inflammation, necrosis. Perifascicular atrophy (DM).
- Treatment (Rx):
- Corticosteroids: Prednisone (1-2 mg/kg/day) mainstay.
- Immunosuppressants: Methotrexate (MTX), Azathioprine (AZA), Mycophenolate (MMF) as steroid-sparing.
- IVIG: Severe/refractory disease, significant dysphagia.
- Rehabilitation: Physiotherapy essential.
⭐ Anti-SRP myopathy often presents with acute, severe weakness, very high CK levels, and may respond poorly to initial steroid therapy.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- PM & DM: Hallmark is symmetric proximal muscle weakness.
- DM: Gottron's papules, heliotrope rash; associated with ↑ malignancy risk (especially ovarian, lung).
- Anti-Jo-1: Key antibody for antisynthetase syndrome (ILD, arthritis, mechanic's hands).
- IBM: Features asymmetric weakness, distal involvement (e.g., finger flexors), and rimmed vacuoles on biopsy.
- Muscle Biopsy: PM shows endomysial inflammation (CD8+ T-cells); DM shows perifascicular atrophy & perimysial inflammation (CD4+ T-cells).
- Labs: Elevated Creatine Kinase (CK) and abnormal EMG are characteristic findings.
- Treatment: Corticosteroids are the mainstay for PM/DM; IBM is often refractory to treatment.
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