BackwardPawn |
08-17-2012 11:14 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by southblues
(Post 906050)
My car wouldn't start. It had a good battery. The wires were good. The engine was good. But there was something in the connection. Gunk.
Myesthenia gravis is a disorder in which the receptors for the neurotransmitter are blocked.
So we have the battery -- the nervous impulse and the release of the acetylcholine.
We have the engine -- the muscles.
The acetylcholine just can't attach to the receptor sites on the muscle.
So we lack a connection. There is gunk in the connection. (antibody)
Mestinon causes the acetycholine that is released to stay around longer. This allows the receptor sites that aren't blocked to have a better chance at getting a signal.
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As a Slashdot user I love car analogies. You just made my day. :D
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