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Cardiovascular

Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)


Pathophysiology

  • X-linked recessive DMD gene mutation → dystrophin deficiency

  • Progressive skeletal & cardiac muscle atrophy

  • Most common muscular dystrophy, onset in early childhood

  • Markedly elevated CK (muscle fibre degeneration)

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Patient Profile

  • Boys aged 2–3 years (rare in girls)

  • Family history may warrant genetic counselling

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Presentation

  • Delayed motor milestones (shuffling/crawling instead of walking)

  • Waddling gait, calf pseudohypertrophy (fat/fibrosis replacement)

  • Hypotonia, hyporeflexia

  • Mild-moderate intellectual impairment

  • Positive Gower’s sign (child “climbs” legs to stand)

  • Progressive difficulty running, jumping, climbing stairs

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Diagnosis

  • Genetic testing (DMD gene mutation, ↑ CK)

  • Muscle biopsy (dystrophin staining if genetic test inconclusive)

  • Cardiac evaluation (ECG, echocardiogram) for cardiomyopathy

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Treatment

  • Neurology referral (specialist in neuromuscular disorders)

  • Corticosteroids (prednisone/deflazacort) (slow progression, prolong ambulation)

  • Physio/OT (maintain mobility, prevent contractures)

  • Cardiac meds, respiratory support (as complications develop)

  • Genetic counselling (family planning, risk assessment)

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Complications

  • Respiratory failure (diaphragmatic weakness → lung complications)

  • Cardiomyopathy & arrhythmias (life-threatening)

  • Scoliosis (requires intervention)

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