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So, let's talk a little about the inflammatory myopathies. What kinds are there? How do we
evaluate them? And what are the treatments? Well, we're going to walk through 5 inflammatory
myopathies that I'd like you for you to know and you need to know to evaluate patients
and vignettes. We're going to talk about polymyositis, dermatomyositis, inclusion body
myositis which has an important difference in how it presents in the distribution. And then
we're going to talk about 2 other causes of inflammatory myopathies. Necrotizing autoimmune
myositis which we're learning is increasingly common as we find antibodies and conditions
to diagnose and test for this. As well as overlap myositis, an important consideration in
patients with polymyositis and other organ system involvement. So, let's walk through each
of these. First, when we are evaluating a patient who has a myopathic clinical presentation,
we've localized the problem to the muscle. How do we know this problem is inflammatory?
How do we know the focus on the inflammatory myopathies and not consider an infectious, or
paraneoplastic, or toxic metabolic, or inherited cause of myopathy? In other words, what test
can be done to determine whether there is inflammation in the muscle? Well, there's a lot of
things we do to look for inflammation. We can look at an ESR or a sedimentation rate. And
that is an acute phase reactant. It's revved up when the body is stressed out when the
immune system is revved up. We can look at a CRP, the C-reactive protein. And that is
something that we know is an inflammatory marker. It's another acute phase reactant and it
goes up in conditions and signs of inflammation. We can do antibody testing and that's how
we look for signs of inflammation in other parts of the body. But in the muscle, what we test
for to look for signs of muscle inflammation is the creatine kinase or the CK. ESR and CRP are
circulating markers that tell us about the systemic system and not about inflammation in the
muscle. Antibody test can be really helpful, but there is a lot of causes of inflammatory
myopathies where we don't know the antibody yet. And so, the most sensitive assessment
of an inflammation within the muscle is to look at the CK.