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  2. List of neuromuscular disorders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neuromuscular...

    Distal muscular dystrophy, also called distal myopathy, is essentially any muscle disease that preferentially affects the hands and/or feet, a much less common pattern than proximal muscle weakness. Late adult-onset type 1; Late adult-onset type 2a; Late adult-onset type 2b; Early adult-onset type 1; Early adult-onset type 2; Early adult-onset ...

  3. Jo Lindner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jo_Lindner

    One of the early videos with his "alien gains" that went viral was attributed to a muscle disease called rippling muscle disease (RMD). [8] [7] He first had such a muscle cramp on the toilet and then slowly discovered how he could manually induce the effect. He succeeded early-on by winning the German National Championship in 2014 and the ...

  4. Muscular dystrophy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscular_Dystrophy

    Disease progresses slowly, and lifespan is shortened. Congenital muscular dystrophy includes several disorders with a range of symptoms. Muscle degeneration may be mild or severe. Problems may be restricted to skeletal muscle, or muscle degeneration may be paired with effects on the brain and other organ systems. [14]

  5. Hoffmann syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoffmann_syndrome

    [14] [15] It is also a comorbidity of late-onset Pompe disease (Glycogen storage disease type II). [16] [17] As both hyper- and hypothyroidism disrupts muscle glycogen metabolism, it is important to keep in mind differential diagnoses and their comorbidities when trying to determine whether signs and symptoms are either primary or secondary ...

  6. Inclusion body myositis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inclusion_body_myositis

    The disease is characterized by slowly progressive weakness and wasting of both proximal muscles (located on or close to the torso) and distal muscles (close to hands or feet), most apparent in the finger flexors and knee extensors. [3] IBM is often confused with an entirely different class of diseases, called hereditary inclusion body ...

  7. Pseudohypertrophy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudohypertrophy

    muscle disease, nerve disease Pseudohypertrophy , or false enlargement, is an increase in the size of an organ due to infiltration of a tissue not normally found in that organ. [ 1 ] It is commonly applied to enlargement of a muscle due to infiltration of fat or connective tissue, [ 2 ] famously in Duchenne muscular dystrophy .

  8. Inflammatory myopathy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflammatory_myopathy

    Inflammatory myopathy, also known as idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM), is disease featuring muscle weakness, inflammation of muscles , and in some types, muscle pain . The cause of much inflammatory myopathy is unknown ( idiopathic ), and such cases are classified according to their symptoms and signs , electromyography , MRI , and ...

  9. Degenerative disc disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degenerative_disc_disease

    Degenerative disc disease (DDD) is a medical condition typically brought on by the aging process in which there are anatomic changes and possibly a loss of function of one or more intervertebral discs of the spine. [1] DDD can take place with or without symptoms, but is typically identified once symptoms arise.