00:00
The last condition I want to touch on is something called polymyalgia rheumatica. And I think
importantly, this is not a myopathy. I commonly see when teaching students and working
in the clinic that students confuse PMR or polymyalgia rheumatica with the other myopathies.
00:20
But importantly, myopathies present with weakness and myalgia syndromes or PMR presents
with muscle pain. And I'd like for you to be able to differentiate those two. So, let's look a
little bit closer at what PMR is. This is also a chronic inflammatory disorder of unknown cause.
00:40
Patients typically present over the age of 50, classically with elevated ESR, elevated
inflammatory enzymes, the sedimentation rate more than 50. The presentation is proximal
myalgias which means proximal muscle pain, not weakness, which differentiates this condition
from things like polymyositis and dermatomyositis. Patients may have morning stiffness,
rheumatologic complaints because this is a type of rheumatologic condition. There are elevated
circulating inflammatory markers like the sedimentation rate or ESR and C-reactive protein or
CRP. And again, these enzymes are indicative of systemic inflammation not the type of muscle
inflammation that we see with poly- and dermatomyositis where there is elevation in CK.
01:28
Management is also corticosteroids because this is an immune-mediated condition. But I think
importantly, when we're evaluating patients for a myopathy like poly- and dermatomyositis,
we're not going to put polymyalgia rheumatica on our differential diagnosis. And likewise, if a
patient presents with muscle pain and we are concerned for polymyalgia rheumatica,
polymyositis and dermatomyositis are unlikely to be on the differential because the patient
has muscle pain and not weakness. So, it's important to be able to differentiate myopathies
from myalgias, and PMR is a good example of this.