myopathic

ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to any disease of the muscles that is not caused by nerve dysfunction
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How To Use myopathic In A Sentence

  • Prophylactic treatment with sialic acid metabolites precludes the development of the myopathic phenotype in the DMRV-hIBM mouse model Random feeds from Syndic8.com
  • The patient presents at birth or during the first year of life with generalized weakness and characteristic myopathic facies with several physical deformities.
  • An electromyogram demonstrated rare myopathic findings in two proximal muscles.
  • The new disease called morbus Thomsenii, of which I wrote in my report last year, has been carefully studied by several men of eminence, and the following conclusions have been reached as to its pathology: The weight of the evidence seems to prove that it is of a neuropathic rather than a myopathic nature, and that it depends on an exaggerated activity of the nervous apparatus which produces muscular tone, and that it has much analogy to the muscular phenomena of hysterical hypnosis, the genesis of which is precisely explained by a functional hyperactivity of the nervous centers of muscular activity. Scientific American Supplement, No. 520, December 19, 1885
  • Most patients had a combination of myopathic features, such as weakness, pain, exercise intolerance, or hypotonia.
  • His pathologic studies encompassed neurogenic and myopathic muscle disease, transverse myelitis, and multiple sclerosis.
  • In addition, two others without a histologically proven diagnosis had a pattern suggestive of a myopathic process.
  • The new disease called morbus Thomsenii, of which I wrote in my report last year, has been carefully studied by several men of eminence, and the following conclusions have been reached as to its pathology: The weight of the evidence seems to prove that it is of a neuropathic rather than a myopathic nature, and that it depends on an exaggerated activity of the nervous apparatus which produces muscular tone, and that it has much analogy to the muscular phenomena of hysterical hypnosis, the genesis of which is precisely explained by a functional hyperactivity of the nervous centers of muscular activity. Scientific American Supplement, No. 520, December 19, 1885
  • The pathologists divide scoliosis into a myopathic variety, in which the trouble is a physiologic antagonism of the muscles; or osteopathic, ordinarily associated with rachitis, which latter variety is generally accountable for congenital scoliosis. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
  • I favor the latter explanation based on the observation that physical exercise may protect the muscle against the steroid myopathic effects.
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