TY - JOUR
T1 - Treatment of pure ocular myasthenia
T2 - A proposal from Japan MG registry 2012
AU - Suzuki, Shigeaki
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Autoimmune myasthenia gravis (MG), affecting both ocular and generalized muscles, results in various symptoms. Ocular myasthenia (OM) is a form of MG that is clinically restricted to extrinsic ocular muscles. Clinical signs of OM can be highly variable, ranging from mild unilateral ptosis to complete opthalmoplegia. There is no clear evidence supporting corticosteroid use for OM. We studied 123 patients whose symptoms were limited to ocular muscles with duration of illness ≥ 2 years. We classified them into two groups: 36 patients with ptosis alone (the ptosis group) and 87 with diplopia with or without ptosis (the diplopia group). Prednisolone (PSL) and immunosuppressants were less frequently used in the ptosis group. There were no significant differences in the post-treatment condition and quality-of-life (QOL) impairment between the two groups. Forty-seven (38%) patients who failed to gain minimal manifestation or better status with PSL ≤ 5 mg/day (the unfavorable condition) showed severe QOL impairment. Ocular-QMG score was a factor associated with the unfavorable condition. A treatment strategy, discriminated by ptosis or diplopia, is necessary to improve the ocular symptoms and QOL in OM patients with the unfavorable condition.
AB - Autoimmune myasthenia gravis (MG), affecting both ocular and generalized muscles, results in various symptoms. Ocular myasthenia (OM) is a form of MG that is clinically restricted to extrinsic ocular muscles. Clinical signs of OM can be highly variable, ranging from mild unilateral ptosis to complete opthalmoplegia. There is no clear evidence supporting corticosteroid use for OM. We studied 123 patients whose symptoms were limited to ocular muscles with duration of illness ≥ 2 years. We classified them into two groups: 36 patients with ptosis alone (the ptosis group) and 87 with diplopia with or without ptosis (the diplopia group). Prednisolone (PSL) and immunosuppressants were less frequently used in the ptosis group. There were no significant differences in the post-treatment condition and quality-of-life (QOL) impairment between the two groups. Forty-seven (38%) patients who failed to gain minimal manifestation or better status with PSL ≤ 5 mg/day (the unfavorable condition) showed severe QOL impairment. Ocular-QMG score was a factor associated with the unfavorable condition. A treatment strategy, discriminated by ptosis or diplopia, is necessary to improve the ocular symptoms and QOL in OM patients with the unfavorable condition.
KW - Ocular myasthenia, diplopia, ptosis, unfavorable condition, qol
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U2 - 10.5692/clinicalneurol.53.1303
DO - 10.5692/clinicalneurol.53.1303
M3 - Article
C2 - 24291968
AN - SCOPUS:84891754271
SN - 0009-918X
VL - 53
SP - 1303
EP - 1305
JO - Clinical Neurology
JF - Clinical Neurology
IS - 11
ER -