myotonia acquisita - meaning and definition. What is myotonia acquisita
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What (who) is myotonia acquisita - definition

HUMAN DISEASE
Sodium channel myotonia; Potassium aggravated myotonia; Potassium aggravated myotonias

Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita         
CHRONIC SUBEPIDERMAL BLISTERING DISEASE ASSOCIATED WITH AUTOIMMUNITY TO TYPE VII COLLAGEN
Epidermolysis acquisata; Acquired epidermolysis bullosa; Drug-induced epidermolysis bullosa acquisita; Epidermolysis acquisata due to drug
Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita, also known as acquired epidermolysis bullosa, is a longterm autoimmune blistering skin disease. It generally presents with fragile skin that blisters and becomes red with or without trauma.
Ichthyosis acquisita         
NON-HEREDITARY FORM OF ICHTHYOSIS CHARACTERIZED BY PLATE-LIKE SCALES ON THE LEGS, ARMS AND OCCASIONALLY THE TORSO
Acquired ichthyosis
Ichthyosis acquisita is a disorder clinically and histologically similar to ichthyosis vulgaris.James, William; Berger, Timothy; Elston, Dirk (2005).
myotonia         
PROLONGED CONTRACTION OF MUSCLES
Myotonic disorders; Myotonic; Myatonia; Amyotonia; Thomsen Syndrome; Mytonia
[?m???(?)'t??n??]
¦ noun Medicine inability to relax voluntary muscle after vigorous effort.
Derivatives
myotonic adjective
Origin
C19: from myo- + Gk tonos 'tone'.

Wikipedia

Potassium-aggravated myotonia

Potassium-aggravated myotonia is a rare genetic disorder that affects skeletal muscle. Beginning in childhood or adolescence, people with this condition experience bouts of sustained muscle tensing (myotonia) that prevent muscles from relaxing normally. Myotonia causes muscle stiffness, often painful, that worsens after exercise and may be aggravated by eating potassium-rich foods such as bananas and potatoes. Stiffness occurs in skeletal muscles throughout the body. Potassium-aggravated myotonia ranges in severity from mild episodes of muscle stiffness to severe, disabling disease with frequent attacks. Potassium-aggravated myotonia may, in some cases, also cause paradoxical myotonia, in which myotonia becomes more severe at the time of movement instead of after movement has ceased. Unlike some other forms of myotonia, potassium-aggravated myotonia is not associated with episodes of muscle weakness.

Mutations in the SCN4A gene cause potassium-aggravated myotonia. The SCN4A gene provides instructions for making a protein that is critical for the normal function of skeletal muscle cells. For the body to move normally, skeletal muscles contract and relax in a coordinated way. Muscle contractions are triggered by the flow of positively charged ions, including sodium, into skeletal muscle cells. The SCN4A protein forms channels that control the flow of sodium ions into these cells. Mutations in the SCN4A gene alter the usual structure and function of sodium channels. The altered channels cannot properly regulate ion flow, increasing the movement of sodium ions into skeletal muscle cells. The influx of extra sodium ions triggers prolonged muscle contractions, which are the hallmark of myotonia.

Potassium-aggravated myotonia is inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern, which means one copy of the altered gene in each cell is sufficient to cause the disorder. In some cases, an affected person inherits a mutation in the SCN4A gene from one affected parent. Other cases result from new mutations in the gene. These cases occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family.