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  Vol. 135 No. 3, March 1981 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Neonatal Myasthenia Gravis

CHARLES F. BARLOW, MD

Am J Dis Child. 1981;135(3):209.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

An elegant chapter of recent medical history is the clarification of the pathogenesis of acquired myasthenia gravis.1 It is now recognized as an immunologic disorder, a principal aspect of which is antibody attack on the acetylcholine receptor protein. The muscle cell receptor apparatus is perturbed, and many remaining binding sites for the neuromuscular excitatory transmitter, acetylcholine, may be disrupted by antibody, giving rise to the fatigability and weakness that are the clinical hallmarks of the disease.

Transient neonatal myasthenia gravis,2 which occurs in about 10% to 15% of offspring of affected mothers, for many years has provided a provocative clue that humoral factors are important in this disease. The report in this issue of the JOURNAL by Donaldson and five collaborators from three medical centers, "Antiacetylcholine Receptor Antibody in Neonatal Myasthenia Gravis" (p 222), provides confirmation that maternal antibody crosses the placenta to the infant. The elevated antibody . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

Department of Neurology Children's Hospital Medical Center 300 Longwood Ave Boston, MA 02115



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