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Hoffman's syndrome: pseudohypertrophic myopathy as initial manifestation of hypothyroidism. Case report

Síndrome de Hoffman: miopatia pseudohipertrófica como manifestação inicial de hipotireoidismo. Relato de caso

Abstracts

The frequency of myopathy in hypothyroidism ranges from 30 to 80%. The major symptoms related are weakness, muscular cramps and myalgia. The pseudohyperthrophic form is called Hoffman's syndrome. The electrophysiological study reveals myopathy, neuropathy or mixed pattern. Laboratorial investigation generally shows increased levels of muscle enzymes and low serum thyroid hormones, with thyrotrophic-stimulating hormone (TSH) elevated. The treatment consists in hormone replacement and the prognosis is good in most of the cases. We report an adult male who developed muscular cramps, myalgia, weakness, pseudohyperthrophy, associated with facial edema and alteration of his voice. The muscle enzymes were increased and T4 was undetectable with a raised level of TSH. The myopathy was the initial manifestation of hypothyroidism in this case.

myopathy; hypothyroidism; pseudohypertrophy


A frequência de miopatia no hipotireoidismo varia de 30% a 80%. Os sintomas relacionados ao acometimento muscular são fraqueza, cãimbras e mialgias. A forma pseudo-hipertrófica é denominada síndrome de Hoffman. O estudo eletrofisiológico pode revelar padrão miopático, neuropático ou misto. A investigação laboratorial em geral mostra aumento das enzimas musculares e redução dos níveis de hormônio tireoidiano com TSH elevado. O tratamento consiste na reposição oral de hormônio e o prognóstico é bom na maioria dos casos. Relatamos o caso de um adulto que apresentou cãimbras, mialgia, fraqueza com pseudohipertrofia muscular associados a edema facial e alteração da voz. As enzimas musculares estavam elevadas e o nível de T4 foi indetectável com aumento de TSH. A miopatia foi manifestação inicial de hipotireoidismo neste caso.

miopatia; hipotireoidismo; pseudo-hipertrofia


Hoffman's syndrome: pseudohypertrophic myopathy as initial manifestation of hypothyroidism. Case report

Síndrome de Hoffman: miopatia pseudohipertrófica como manifestação inicial de hipotireoidismo. Relato de caso

Luiz Felipe Rocha VasconcellosI; Maria Claudia PeixotoI; Tatiana Nunes de OliveiraI; Glória PenqueII; Ana Claudia Celestino LeiteI

Institute of Neurology Deolindo Couto (INDC), Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) and University Hospital Clementino Fraga Filho (HUCFF), Rio de Janeiro RJ, Brazil

IMD

IIDepartment of Clinical Neurophysiology, INDC/UFRJ

ABSTRACT

The frequency of myopathy in hypothyroidism ranges from 30 to 80%. The major symptoms related are weakness, muscular cramps and myalgia. The pseudohyperthrophic form is called Hoffman's syndrome. The electrophysiological study reveals myopathy, neuropathy or mixed pattern. Laboratorial investigation generally shows increased levels of muscle enzymes and low serum thyroid hormones, with thyrotrophic-stimulating hormone (TSH) elevated. The treatment consists in hormone replacement and the prognosis is good in most of the cases. We report an adult male who developed muscular cramps, myalgia, weakness, pseudohyperthrophy, associated with facial edema and alteration of his voice. The muscle enzymes were increased and T4 was undetectable with a raised level of TSH. The myopathy was the initial manifestation of hypothyroidism in this case.

Key words: myopathy, hypothyroidism, pseudohypertrophy.

RESUMO

A frequência de miopatia no hipotireoidismo varia de 30% a 80%. Os sintomas relacionados ao acometimento muscular são fraqueza, cãimbras e mialgias. A forma pseudo-hipertrófica é denominada síndrome de Hoffman. O estudo eletrofisiológico pode revelar padrão miopático, neuropático ou misto. A investigação laboratorial em geral mostra aumento das enzimas musculares e redução dos níveis de hormônio tireoidiano com TSH elevado. O tratamento consiste na reposição oral de hormônio e o prognóstico é bom na maioria dos casos. Relatamos o caso de um adulto que apresentou cãimbras, mialgia, fraqueza com pseudohipertrofia muscular associados a edema facial e alteração da voz. As enzimas musculares estavam elevadas e o nível de T4 foi indetectável com aumento de TSH. A miopatia foi manifestação inicial de hipotireoidismo neste caso.

Palavras-chave: miopatia, hipotireoidismo, pseudo-hipertrofia.

The thyroid hormone is necessary to cell metabolism of all organic systems. Its deficiency is manifested by a systemic disease with insidious onset. The manifestations on the central nervous system (CNS), are characterized by psychiatric symptoms, cerebellar ataxia, cranial neuropathy and seizures1. An impairment of peripheral nervous system and muscles leads to different types of neuropathy and myopathy being responsible for 5% of acquired myopathies2. The myopathy associated with hypothyroidism could be divided in four subtypes: Kocher-Debré-Semelaigne syndrome, Hoffman's syndrome, atrophic form and myasthenic syndrome3. In the Kocher-Debré-Semelaigne syndrome described in infants with cretinism, as in the Hoffman syndrome, patients presented with hypertrophy, muscular weakness, slowness of mental and locomotor activities. In Hoffman syndrome it is described also muscular cramps, stiffness post-exercise and pseudomyotonic phenomenon. Other less frequent presentations are atrophic myopathy and myasthenic syndrome with unsatisfactory response to edrophonium. In most of the cases, the level of muscular enzymes is elevated, with no relation to the severity of the myopathic symptoms4. In primary hypothyroidism, the hormonal dosage shows low circulating of thyroid hormones (T3 and T4) with elevated TSH. Once the hormonal reposition is started, the myopathy could be reversible with good prognosis. Although it is a rare condition, the myopathy may be the first presentation of hypothyroidism2.

We present a case in which myopathy was the first symptom of autoimmune thyroiditis.

CASE

A, 42 years-old man admitted for diagnostic investigation of progressive muscular weakness with muscular cramps and myalgia started one year before. He had mentioned a gastric surgery for resection of an abdominal tumor (histological diagnostic of non-Hodgkin lymphoma) followed by treatment with chemotherapy nine years ago. Since then, he remained asymptomatic with normal clinical and laboratorial exams. We observed in clinical examination: infiltrated facies, macroglossia and the voice was hoarse cry, hypophonesis of heart sounds and sinusal bradycardia (56 bpm). On neurological examination was observed pseudohypertrophy (Fig 1) with proximal paresis of inferior limbs (Grade 4/5 Muscle Research Council [MRC]), generalized hyporeflexia, and superficial hypoesthesia on the distal superior limbs. On the exam of the cranial nerves, bilateral impairment of the cochlear portion of VIII nerve.


Laboratorial investigation reveals (Table 1): (1) increased serum levels of muscular enzymes; (2) mild elevation of serum level of creatinine; (3) leukopenia; (4) dislipidemia degree IV, (5) dosage of thyroid hormones compatible with primary hypothyroidism with raised levels of anti-thyroglobulin (1977 u/ml – Normal: 40 u/ml) and anti-peroxidase(>1000 u/ml- Normal: 35 u/ml), (6) electrocardiogram (ECG) showed sinus bradycardia with low voltage in the precordial leads, (7) electrophysiological study showed normal Desmet and repetitive stimulation test. The motor and sensitive neuroconduction did not revealed abnormalities. The first electromyography (February/2001) revealed a diminished recruiting of motor unit (neurogenic pattern). The second exam (April/2001) showed a mixed pattern (myogenic and neurogenic).

After ten days of thyroid hormone therapy, the patient referred improvement of the muscular cramps. Three months latter, he was asymptomatic. There was progressive lowering of the levels of muscular enzymes (Table 1).

DISCUSSION

The neurological manifestations of hypothyroidism usually occur after clinic impairment of other systems, so it is unusual to see it as the initial symptoms. Primary hypothyroidism accounts for 95% of the cases of thyroid insufficiency. The main etiology is Hashimoto's thyroiditis, an autoimmune chronic thyroiditis characterized by high levels of anti-peroxidase antibodies (anti-TPO) and anti-thyroglobulin, as documented in our case. Anti-thyroglobulin is present in 80-90% of the cases and anti-TPO may be present in 90 -100% of the cases5. Signals and symptoms related to hypothyroidism myopathy usually include cramps, muscular weakness, myalgia, myxedema and hyporeflexia6. The myalgia may be so expressive that it resembles polymyositis in some cases7. Rarely, exercise-induced myalgia secondary to recurrent rabdomyolisis could be an isolated manifestation8. Myokymia may be another peripheral manifestation and it seems to be related to sodium loss9. There are different clinical presentations of the myopathy: weakness with muscular pseudohypertrophy, muscular atrophy or myasthenic syndrome3.

The adult pseudohypertrophic form is named Hoffman syndrome10. It is a rare syndrome described by Hoffman in 1897. Our patient fits in this form. Clinically he presented with proximal weakness, muscular cramps, rigidity, myalgia and increase in muscular mass.

The laboratorial investigation usually shows increased levels of muscular enzymes. The creatinophosphokinase (CPK) is the best biochemical marker of myopaties. The other enzymes (aldolase, AST and ALT, LDH) have a complementary role in the absence of hepatopathy11. In a study performed by Gianpietro et al. to determined the most sensitive enzyme to investigated myopathy, the CPK was elevated in 60% cases, in the superior limit in 30% and normal in 10%, showing that this enzyme is the best biochemical marker for the investigation of myopathies, because it is a low cost method, sensitive and easy to perform12. The level of CPK does not relate to the clinical picture in the case of hypothyroidism, the patient may be symptomatic and have a normal CPK level, or the opposite12,13. The alteration of the level of CPK may vary from low elevations to extremely raised levels14. The fall on the enzyme levels with the treatment occurs slowly, varying from weeks, months or even years7,12.15. In the presented case, muscular enzymes returned to normal values in three months.

The electrophysiological study may be compatible with neurogenic, myogenic, a mix of those patterns, or even normal. The findings compatible with myogenic pattern are diminished duration and amplitude of motor unit potential, increase in polyphasics, with voluntary contraction there is early recruiting of the short action motor units, spontaneous fibrillations, positive waves and complex repetitive discharges11,15. Cruz et al. showed, in a study with 16 patients with primary hypothyroidism, electrophysiological abnormalities in 87.5% of the patients, being 46.6% with myopathic pattern, 43.7% with neuropathic pattern (carpal tunnel syndrome), and 25% with a mixed pattern16. The referred patient presented mixed pattern with carpal tunnel syndrome. In the case, despite the expressive clinical improvement with normalization of muscular enzymes, some electroneurophysiological alterations persisted as early recruiting, polyphasics, and bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome.

Pseudohypertrophy etiology in Hoffman's syndrome remains obscure and a matter of discussion. It has been postulated that the mechanisms involved could include an increase in connective tissue, increase in the size of muscular fibers and increase of the number of muscular fibers6. Ono et al.6, in a study made with cases of hypothyroidism causing myopathy, showed that the diameter of the type I and II fibers could be normal and there was not an increase in the connective tissue, so the hypertrophy of muscular fibers and increase in connective tissue may be absent in Hoffman's syndrome. The severity of the myopathic picture seems to be related to some findings of muscular biopsy. In severe cases there is atrophy of type II muscular fibers, associated to central core of the nucleus, mainly of the type II muscular fiber3. On optic microscopy the alterations are atrophy, necrosis, muscular fibers hypertrophy, increase in the number of nucleus, ring-shaped fibers, glycogen deposits and increase of connective tissue9. Ultra-structural analysis showed edema and mitochondrial inclusions, myofibrillar fragmentation, glycogen deposits, lipid granule, sarcoplasmatic reticulum dilatation, autophagic vacuole, changes in the central core and T tubule9.

There is an association between thyroid dysfunction and lymphoma treatment, which usually occurs after blanket radiotherapy17,18. Chemotherapy seems to reduce the incidence of hypothyroidism in patients treated with radiotherapy, because of its immunosupressor effect18. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy associated seems to elevate the incidence of thyroid nodules17,18. Probably radiotherapy is associated to hypothyroidism because it compromises thyroid tissue, leading to cellular destruction, and consequently a reduction of thyroid follicles, leading to releasing of auto antibodies against thyroid cells18. In the present case, as the patient was treated only with chemotherapy, there was not a relation between the lymphoma treatment and the thyroid dysfunction, being a fortuitous association with autoimmune thyroiditis.

The treatment consists on given synthetic thyroid hormone, in the form of thyroxin, and the dosage varies between 100 to 200µg/day. Patients should be evaluated for cardiovascular risks previously to treatment because the risk of acute coronary insufficiency, especially in elderly. Some patients with severe myopathic manifestations may present a worsening in the beginning of the treatment, probably caused by the raise of metabolic demand induced by thyroxin3. In these cases, it is recommended the concomitant use of corticotherapy during some time of the treatment, as membrane-stabilizing effect3.

In conclusion, the etiology of myopathy in the related case was associated with autoimmune thyroiditis in a patient with previous history of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. There was resolution of the symptoms with three months of treatment in use of thyroxin (150 µg /day). It is an infrequent cause of myopathy, with good prognosis.

Received 13 November 2002

Received in final from 7 April 2003

Accepted 9 May 2003

Dr. Luiz Felipe Rocha Vasconcellos - Rua Barão da Torre 209/102 - 22411001 Rio de Janeiro RJ - Brazil. FAX: 55 21 228 43698. E-mail: luizneurol@hotmail.com

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    12 Nov 2003
  • Date of issue
    Sept 2003

History

  • Received
    13 Nov 2002
  • Accepted
    09 May 2003
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