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Old 12-12-2007, 10:03 AM #11
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Thanks for both of your posts, it is sooo good to talk to folks who have an understanding and acceptance of the dynamics that occur with hereditary diseases.

I just had a muscle biopsy. I assume they will be looking at mitochondria. They are looking for abnormal proteins that are associated with myopathies that come with neuropathies. Some are passed thru maternal mitochondria, other myopathies are not sex linked at all, and quite a few are autosomal dominant.

I am not sure if it will be fruitful or just a dead end. All other causes for my substantial small fiber neuropathy have been exhausted at this point. If this comes back negative, then, I simply have to wait for additional pathology to manifest, or simply accept that they can find no cause.

It is wonderful that both of you undertook the journey to explore the brave new world of genetics. It will so much help the next generation, and save them so much suffering, going undiagnosed, misdiagnosed etc.

My concern is for my children. I do not want them to suffer for decades with misdiagnosis and self doubt. So if I carry a mutation, I want to know. What my grown kids do with that information is up to them. Some of it depends on what it is they find.

I do know my husband's family carries the BRCA2 gene, and just thinking about that is a bit scary. But I think a lot of people carry that gene, it is good to know it is there, and good to know that our daughters need to be vigilant.

And yes, I do think that all families carry genetic abberations and that is life.
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Old 12-12-2007, 03:01 PM #12
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This is an interesting thread. I myself know that I carry the HLA B27 Gene. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HLA-B27 I don't have enough family left to check the link very far. I do know that my paternal grandmother, and my father also carry this gene and suffered the damage from it. My Dad has Rheumatoid Arthritis and I suspect my grandmother did too. She died when I was in my early 20's. But I remember her as being very crippled up and sickly. Her autopsy revealed she had cancer of the bone. That is three generations of defective gene. I don't know if my son carries this gene, he refuses to be tested and I didn't find out about my own in time to check his.

My defective gene is probably pretty common but the Sjogren's and it's damage isn't. That is one of the reasons that I left my DNA all over the labs at Mayo. Perhaps future generations will benefit from my history.

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Old 12-12-2007, 04:08 PM #13
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--there is the controversy now in gluten/celiac circles as to whether thaat conditon can manifest in those who have other than the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) DQ2 or DQ8 genetic subtype. (There's some evidence that some people who tend more towards neurological manifestations of gluten sensitivity, such as ataxia or neuropathy, are more likely to be subtype DQ1; apparently there are even a few biopsy-proven celiacs with that type, according to some of the work of Dr. Hadjivassiliou and colleagues).

I know Liza Jane has some knowledge of mitchondrial disorders--perhaps she'll chime in.

It is a very interesting area--made all the more confusing by the idea of genetic predisposition then being expressed (or not expressed) by environmental factors turning certian genes on or off. Much of what we know now will certainly go through revision and reparadigmization over the next decades.
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Old 12-12-2007, 04:40 PM #14
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Thanks for sharing your stories and expertise. There is so much out there. What surprised me was how many of these diseases are known, as are the patterns of inheritance. There is a lot out there we do not know, but there are many diseases, with set gene loci and patterns that we hear little about. Hearing what people do know, helps.

I did not think that much about heredity until lately. I knew it was a possibility, but just never thought that there were so many identified diseases, with known patterns of inheritance, that contained small fiber neuropathy!

It is good to have a thread where folks can share this stuff if they want to, and if they don't want to deal with it, they don't have to click on the thread.
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Old 12-21-2007, 11:59 AM #15
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Heh, heh...I knew I would end up here...again.

I just got back my muscle biopsy reports...I have some mild myopathy...not enough to account for weakness, but then again, I haven't complained of weakness there....I have been grousing about my feet, hands, neck and back.

Where was this mild but surprising myopathy??

The bicep...the old Popeye muscle. (Shoulda eaten that spinach)

They did the bicep muscle because it is the farthest away from any neurologically damaged tissue...and they found mild, but surprising, myopathy in the bicep. It is neurologically induced. Meaning, the muscle is deteriorating due to a lack of innervation, likely small fiber, highly likely hereditary, likely autosomal dominant.

They are proceeding with more study on the sample to rule out Anterior Horn Diseases, which cause the same look in the muscle cell...but are fairly confident it is a hereditary neuropathy producing a myopathy....and not just that, but it also produces changes in any organ that is not getting proper innervation, such as skin, muscle, endocrine and or exocrine glands.

Mitochondria are fine....cute little buggers....so probably that rules out any mitochondrial DNA stuff from mom...of course there are other genes from mom but....I have a hunch where this came from...but can't say right now, 'ya hey dare---you betcha-- I have a hunch'. But I could be surprised, in time.

There is no sign of inflammation. I sometimes wonder if my body is capable of getting inflammed!!! I know now, that my kids will never have to go thru the 'it's in your head' thing.

I am tossed into that black hole which will eventually spew out a lot of new constellations of diseases. Maybe in this lifetime...maybe not...but I have contributed to the advancement of science, albeit nebulous at this time. I wish I could hang my hat on a star and say, bingo, this is this specific disease, but, we are beyond idiopathic, to hereditary, we are beyond small fiber neuropathy, which it IS, but on to documenting more and more sequlae to small fiber neuropathy, and perhaps a new name for an old disease or a new disease category within a huge galaxy of what we call PN.

Beam me up Scottie!
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Old 12-21-2007, 12:16 PM #16
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Now that I have a bit more info....I want to share a few disease categories that every one should at least glance over.

Hereditary Distal Myopathies
Adult onset myopathies
Adult onset muscular dystrophies
Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1 and Type 2 (PROMM)

There are some ethnic pockets of higher incidence.

Maybe one of the folks that has been thru genetic testing would like to share their experience and definition of terms, such as dominant, recessive, sex linked, penetrance, anticipation. I get too wordy.

That said, I do want to reiterate....we are no where near finding a gene locus for me....I simply switched categories from idiopathic to hereditary, clarified it is not inflammatory...it is still the same disease, still nameless, but not faceless. This entity has faces now, and it may, possibly have lineages and names....then again it may not.

This is the third biopsy I have had: epidermal nerve fiber density shows small fiber from normal to severe loss depending on location...(the muscle biopsy done on me was very close to an area that showed normal innervation)

A muscle biopsy which shows mild myopathy, thought to be of neurogenic origin, with abnormal angular fibers...again mild.

A labial biopsy which should chronic changes without inflammation, read by Mayo as consistent with Sjogren's. 'Consistent' with is their way of saying...we can't call it that, but there is something wrong and we find this kind of thing in Sjogren's.

Again, I had NO lymphocytic infiltration, which some folks on here do have on their labial biopsies. That is important to note...as lymphocytes indicate inflammation. My gland is simply not getting innervated properly and works quite well at times. This also applies to my eyes...and it is possible that I am sleeping with my eyes slightly open due to the neurogenic myopathy condition I have....Sleeping with eyes open is called nocturnal lagopathalmos. My eyes do dry out during the night something awful....during the day they are usually OK unless something is blowing on them. I can wear contact lenses at times.
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Old 12-21-2007, 01:20 PM #17
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I don't know all that much about mitochondrial conditions...my experience with mitochondrial DNA is more ethnologically based...just that you can trace ancient, really ancient ancestry thru DNA passed thru mitochondria from mother to daughter. This is mostly ancestral stuff...I don't even know how much they can do for recent stuff. The original Eve stuff.....

It is disconcerting to think you have some genetic crud, and you are suffering and they don't know where it is coming from, yet...but the 'yet' is important. Everything starts with a 'yet'....from uncertainty comes certainty...which then gets blown apart by yet a new theory, which needs testing. I have kids, so I do have some real concerns....humor is the way I deal with stuff. When I was stuck in a crashed car, pinned under a truck with propane cylinders in the bay....I got to cracking jokes...(once they had my kids out....I was in no mood to be humorous when those kids were in that car and at the time, all I heard was some one say they smelled gas....I had no idea there really was GAS!!!)....there are times, there are things you just may not escape. That was one of those times....I didn't know there was propane in the back bay of that truck that hit me, and could not figure out why they needed 3 fire departments....

My humor is never, ever meant to demean any one's pain or suffering. Pain and suffering sucks...and as I said, I do my share of moping. Life can be so ironic at times, I have no choice but to see the humor in it....it is hard tho, and I hurt bad and I am scared about my loss of function and mortified at the thought I may have passed this on, and they do not know what it is yet, but we know we have lost people, early on, in my family. If they do not know what to test for, well, we can't really figure out for sure which side it is coming down on....one is very populous...the other side, there are fewer of us, and man, I do not know if they do find something, how I would ever locate them. I don't even know if people WANT this info. For me it beats having the ubiquitous fibromyalgia...which again, I contend is a symptom which needs to be followed up on....For me this finding narrows the small fiber neuropathy focus....from wide angle to zoom.

I am mortified about 'anticipation'....those of you who have done any genetic reading know about that.

My doc, whom I regard as some 'archangel'...and I do not say that much about docs....he is human, he grumps at me now and then, but not much...has gone with me on this. I have had several very, very good docs, who went way beyond the call of duty....recently. I know he is frustrated and would like to get to the bottom of this too, as it is an enigma, and I am tenacious...and he has the staff and tools...and he is tremendously compassionate, infinitely intelligent, and well, nice. I have had some tremendously patient, intelligent minds work on this, from the pathology to the surgery to the case coordination.

I am not dying, and I can't lose sight that these docs take care of people every day, who get very bad news...and need a cure immediately. At times I feel too lucky to have these wonderful docs, yet, I have had my share of heartache too, and hope for some consideration.

When you get into these new categories they do not want to narrow things too fast, and give the wrong diagnosis, when a new disease or entity could be hiding over the hedge....it takes patience, which I have little of.

I went thru almost a 2 decade drought of real duds...we have all been there...remember, when it was in your head???

I forgot, I actually had 4 biopsies...I forgot the fat aspiration for amyloidosis, which was negative...thank heavens.

There are a few hereditary diseases that jump right out at docs....then there are the less frequent ones, then the rarer ones, then the huge mess of idiopathic oddities from which these docs try to glean similar tissue types...then I imagine similar gene mutation loci.

That jump from tissue type to gene can't be a leap of faith based on clinical findings....it boils down to misplaced adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine...and in RNA uracil.....somewhere amongst millions of pairs, there are the mismatches, the repetitions. Picky, picky work done by very smart people who can deal with all that monotony and highly detailed work.

And yes, we all carry some mutations...that is evolution.

No one is perfect...not yet!! (Hopefully never)
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