eMedicine Specialties > Neurology > Neuromuscular Diseases

Kennedy Disease: Multimedia

Author: Paul E Barkhaus, MD, Professor, Department of Neurology, Medical College of Wisconsin; Director of Neuromuscular Diseases, Milwaukee Veterans Administration Medical Center
Contributor Information and Disclosures

Updated: Jan 24, 2008

Multimedia

Note wasting in the thighs and shoulders. The arm...Media file 1: Note wasting in the thighs and shoulders. The arms hang down and are rotated internally so that the thumbs point toward the patient (ie, simian posture) rather than forward, as in a healthy individual. This observation strongly suggests weakness in shoulder girdle muscles (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).
Note wasting in the thighs and shoulders. The arm...

Note wasting in the thighs and shoulders. The arms hang down and are rotated internally so that the thumbs point toward the patient (ie, simian posture) rather than forward, as in a healthy individual. This observation strongly suggests weakness in shoulder girdle muscles (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).

Prominence of breast tissue consistent with gynec...Media file 2: Prominence of breast tissue consistent with gynecomastia in Kennedy disease (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).
Prominence of breast tissue consistent with gynec...

Prominence of breast tissue consistent with gynecomastia in Kennedy disease (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).

The forehead of this patient with Kennedy disease...Media file 3: The forehead of this patient with Kennedy disease is smooth, in fact, too smooth for a man this age. The smoothness is particularly noticeable when the patient tries to perform upgaze, when wrinkling of the forehead due to contraction of the frontalis is expected (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).
The forehead of this patient with Kennedy disease...

The forehead of this patient with Kennedy disease is smooth, in fact, too smooth for a man this age. The smoothness is particularly noticeable when the patient tries to perform upgaze, when wrinkling of the forehead due to contraction of the frontalis is expected (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).

Photographs show asymmetry at rest due to facial ...Media file 4: Photographs show asymmetry at rest due to facial weakness, which is enhanced when the muscles are activated by pursing the lips (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).
Photographs show asymmetry at rest due to facial ...

Photographs show asymmetry at rest due to facial weakness, which is enhanced when the muscles are activated by pursing the lips (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).

Note the scalloping of the borders of the tongue,...Media file 5: Note the scalloping of the borders of the tongue, which strongly suggests wasting. In addition, the marked wasting of the large group of glossal muscles on each side has caused them to separate and form a midline furrow (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).
Note the scalloping of the borders of the tongue,...

Note the scalloping of the borders of the tongue, which strongly suggests wasting. In addition, the marked wasting of the large group of glossal muscles on each side has caused them to separate and form a midline furrow (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).

Motor-unit action potentials recorded from the bi...Media file 6: Motor-unit action potentials recorded from the biceps brachii in a patient with Kennedy disease.

Upper tracing shows 2 action potentials discharging during low-to-moderate effort. In a healthy person, additional discharges are expected. (Calibration is 1 mV per division on the vertical axis and 10 ms per division on the horizontal axis.) Potential on the left is approximately 1.2 mV and 26 ms. It is moderately increased in amplitude, almost twice the upper limit in duration, and shows marked irregularity or serrations (ie, turns) in the main component. Potential to the right is markedly increased in amplitude (approximately 3.3 mV), and its duration is at least 30 ms but cannot be measured on this tracing because it extends off to the right and qualifies as a giant motor-unit action potential.

Bottom tracing shows the same 2 potentials at standard setting used to view motor-unit action potentials (0.1 mV per vertical division), which emphasizes their large size and complexity (ie, increased number of changes in polarity of the waveform) (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).
Motor-unit action potentials recorded from the bi...

Motor-unit action potentials recorded from the biceps brachii in a patient with Kennedy disease.

Upper tracing shows 2 action potentials discharging during low-to-moderate effort. In a healthy person, additional discharges are expected. (Calibration is 1 mV per division on the vertical axis and 10 ms per division on the horizontal axis.) Potential on the left is approximately 1.2 mV and 26 ms. It is moderately increased in amplitude, almost twice the upper limit in duration, and shows marked irregularity or serrations (ie, turns) in the main component. Potential to the right is markedly increased in amplitude (approximately 3.3 mV), and its duration is at least 30 ms but cannot be measured on this tracing because it extends off to the right and qualifies as a giant motor-unit action potential.

Bottom tracing shows the same 2 potentials at standard setting used to view motor-unit action potentials (0.1 mV per vertical division), which emphasizes their large size and complexity (ie, increased number of changes in polarity of the waveform) (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).

Recording of motor-unit action potentials from th...Media file 7: Recording of motor-unit action potentials from the pectoralis muscle in a patient with Kennedy disease. (Calibration is 1 mV per division on the vertical axis and 10 ms per division on the horizontal axis.) The patient's level of effort in activation is high. Therefore, the number of motor unit action potentials clearly is reduced, and the individual potentials observed are enlarged, consistent with a chronic neurogenic process (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).
Recording of motor-unit action potentials from th...

Recording of motor-unit action potentials from the pectoralis muscle in a patient with Kennedy disease. (Calibration is 1 mV per division on the vertical axis and 10 ms per division on the horizontal axis.) The patient's level of effort in activation is high. Therefore, the number of motor unit action potentials clearly is reduced, and the individual potentials observed are enlarged, consistent with a chronic neurogenic process (copyright Paul E. Barkhaus, MD, 2000, with permission).

More on Kennedy Disease

Overview: Kennedy Disease
Differential Diagnoses & Workup: Kennedy Disease
Treatment & Medication: Kennedy Disease
Follow-up: Kennedy Disease
Multimedia: Kennedy Disease
References

References

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Further Reading

Keywords

KD, Kennedy's disease, X-linked bulbospinal muscular atrophy, X-linked recessive bulbospinal neuronopathy, DXYS1, cytosine-adenine-guanine repeat, CAG repeat

Contributor Information and Disclosures

Author

Paul E Barkhaus, MD, Professor, Department of Neurology, Medical College of Wisconsin; Director of Neuromuscular Diseases, Milwaukee Veterans Administration Medical Center
Paul E Barkhaus, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Neurology, American Association of Neuromuscular and Electrodiagnostic Medicine, and American Neurological Association
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.

Medical Editor

Rodrigo O Kuljis, MD, Esther Lichtenstein Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology, Director, Division of Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, Department of Neurology, University of Miami School of Medicine
Rodrigo O Kuljis, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Neurology and Society for Neuroscience
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.

Pharmacy Editor

Francisco Talavera, PharmD, PhD, Senior Pharmacy Editor, eMedicine
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.

Managing Editor

Neil A Busis, MD, Chief, Division of Neurology, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center - Shadyside, Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Neurology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Neil A Busis, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Neurology and American Association of Neuromuscular and Electrodiagnostic Medicine
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.

CME Editor

Selim R Benbadis, MD, Professor, Director of Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Departments of Neurology and Neurosurgery, University of South Florida School of Medicine, Tampa General Hospital
Selim R Benbadis, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Neurology, American Academy of Sleep Medicine, American Clinical Neurophysiology Society, American Epilepsy Society, and American Medical Association
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.

Chief Editor

Nicholas Y Lorenzo, MD, Chief Editor, eMedicine Neurology; Consulting Staff, Neurology Specialists and Consultants
Nicholas Y Lorenzo, MD is a member of the following medical societies: Alpha Omega Alpha and American Academy of Neurology
Disclosure: Nothing to disclose.

 
 
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