Spinal
bulbar muscular atrophy
It
also identified as Kennedy disease, is a complaint of particular nerve cells that
switch muscle movement (motor neurons). These nerve cells create in the spinal
cord and the part of the brain that is linked to the spinal cord (the
brain stem).
Symptoms
Early
signs often comprise faintness of tongue and mouth muscles, fasciculations, and
slowly increasing faintness of limb muscles with muscle wasting.
Treatment
Medicines
such as hydroxyurea, phenyl butyrate,valproic acid, and albuterol have been
exposed to upsurge SMN record in laboratory studies, but scientific trials have
not established important upgrading in disease development.
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