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Infection - The most common infectious cause of myositis is viral infections, such as the common cold. [4] Other viruses, such as COVID-19, are also shown to be a rare cause of myositis. [6] Benign acute childhood myositis has been described in children after prodromal viral infections with different viral agents.
The infection can affect any skeletal muscle, but most often infects the large muscle groups such as the quadriceps or gluteal muscles. [2] [4] [5] Pyomyositis is mainly a disease of children and was first described by Scriba in 1885. Most patients are aged 2 to 5 years, but infection may occur in any age group.
Polymyositis and the associated inflammatory myopathies have an associated increased risk of cancer. [3] The features they found associated with an increased risk of cancer were older age, age greater than 45, male sex, difficulty swallowing, death of skin cells, cutaneous vasculitis, rapid onset of myositis (<4 weeks), elevated creatine kinase, higher erythrocyte sedimentation rate and higher ...
Affected are preschool and school-age children with a male predominance. [2] In one study, the median age was 6 years (range 2–13.2 years). [1] It has been estimated that BACM has an incidence of 2.69 cases per 100,000 children (<18 years) during epidemic seasons and 0.23 cases during non-epidemic seasons. [3]
[1] [9] [10] This is due to a number of factors, including: overlapping symptoms (such as muscle weakness, pain, elevated CK); that delaying treatment for an inflammatory myopathy, in order to exclude potential non-inflammatory myopathies, may cause irreversible damage (although administering immunosuppressants and glucocorticosteroids to non ...
It manifests itself in children; it is the pediatric counterpart of dermatomyositis. In JDM, the body's immune system attacks blood vessels throughout the body, causing inflammation called vasculitis. In the United States, the incidence rate of JDMS is approximately 2-3 cases per million children per year. The UK incidence is believed to be ...
Complement deficiency has historically been associated with early, severe bacterial infections among children. [5] Infection susceptibility is frequently observed. [6] C2D is linked to abnormalities in serum immunoglobulin levels, such as lower IgG2 and IgG4 levels, which could contribute to raised infection susceptibility. More than half of 40 ...
IBM is often confused with (misdiagnosed as) polymyositis. Polymyositis that does not respond to treatment is likely IBM. [35] Dermatomyositis shares a number of similar physical symptoms and histopathological traits as polymyositis, but exhibits a skin rash not seen in polymyositis or sIBM. It may have different root causes unrelated to either ...