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Clinical features

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

Authoring team

The cardinal feature of myotonic dystrophy is myotonia although this often lessens and may disappear as the disease progresses.

In the face:

  • frontal baldness
  • myopathic face with ptosis, hanging jaw, wasting of muscles of mastication, hollowing of temporal fossae and cheeks - sometimes described as a fish face
  • wasting of sternocleidomastoid - weak neck flexion, normal neck extension, swan neck appearance
  • cataracts in 80% of cases

In the limbs:

  • characteristic is the inability of the patient to let go of the examiner's hand when they shake hands
  • percussion myotonia - via tapping over the thenar eminence - may result in contraction and slow relaxation of opponens pollicis
  • wasting and weakness distally

Others features include:

  • testicular atrophy in males
  • mental impairment in 30% of cases

Note that non-neurological manifestations - frontal baldness, cataracts especially in the posterior part of lens, infertility - may predate muscle weakness and myotonia.


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