Neurology diagnoses and treats disorders of the nervous system, including the brain, spinal cord, and nerves, as well as thought and memory.

We're Here to Help.
Get in Touch.

Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.

Doctors

Pediatric Neuromuscular: Diagnosis and Imaging

The diagnostic journey for neuromuscular disorders has evolved from invasive muscle biopsies to precise genomic testing. The goal is to identify the specific molecular defect as quickly as possible. Time is neurons; in conditions like SMA, early diagnosis allows for treatment before irreversible paralysis occurs.

  • Detailed clinical phenotyping
  • Serum enzyme analysis
  • Genetic and genomic sequencing
  • Electrophysiological testing
  • Muscle imaging and biopsy
Icon LIV Hospital

The Clinical Examination and History

NEUROLOGY

Diagnosis begins with a meticulous history. The neurologist looks for a family history of weakness, cataracts, or early death. The timeline of symptoms is critical: was the baby floppy at birth (congenital myopathy), or did they develop normally and then regress (SMA type 2)?

  • Family pedigree analysis
  • Developmental milestone timeline
  • Assessment of muscle bulk and tone
  • Identification of weakness patterns (proximal vs distal)
  • Evaluation of deep tendon reflexes

The physical exam distinguishes between central (brain) and peripheral (muscle/nerve) causes. In central disorders (like cerebral palsy), reflexes are brisk and tone is high (spasticity). In neuromuscular disorders, reflexes are often absent and tone is low (flaccidity). Fasciculations (tiny muscle twitches) on the tongue are a specific sign of SMA.

  • Differentiation of spasticity vs flaccidity
  • Checking for tongue fasciculations
  • Observation of gait mechanics
  • Functional testing (time to run 10 meters)
  • Sensory examination (often normal in myopathy)
Icon 1 LIV Hospital

Enzyme Analysis (CK Levels)

NEUROLOGY

Creatine Kinase (CK) is an enzyme that leaks out of damaged muscle cells. Measuring CK levels is a simple blood test that serves as an excellent screening tool. In Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, CK levels are massively elevated, often 10 to 100 times the normal limit.

  • Serum Creatine Kinase (CK) measurement
  • Screening for muscular dystrophy
  • Detection of carrier status in females
  • Liver enzyme elevation (AST/ALT) often mirrors muscle damage
  • Differentiation from neurogenic causes (normal CK)

It is important to note that in neurogenic disorders like SMA or neuropathies like CMT, the muscle is not leaking, so the CK levels are usually normal or only slightly elevated. Therefore, a normal CK does not rule out a neuromuscular disorder, but a very high CK strongly points to a muscular dystrophy.

  • High CK indicates muscle membrane damage
  • Normal CK suggests nerve or junction problem
  • Transient CK elevation can occur with trauma
  • Importance of avoiding exercise before testing
  • AST/ALT elevation often misdiagnosed as liver disease

Genetic and Genomic Testing

Genetic testing is now the gold standard for diagnosis. Chromosomal Microarray (CMA) helps rule out large deletions. Specific gene panels can test hundreds of neuromuscular genes simultaneously. For SMA and Duchenne, targeted testing is often the first step due to their prevalence and specific mutation types.

  • SMN1 gene deletion testing for SMA
  • DMD gene deletion/duplication analysis
  • Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) panels
  • Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) for rare cases
  • Rapid Whole Genome Sequencing (rWGS) in NICU

Genetic diagnosis allows for “genotype phenotype correlation,” helping doctors predict the severity of the disease. It is also the gateway to treatment; gene therapies are mutation specific. For example, exon skipping drugs only work for patients with specific deletions in the dystrophin gene.

  • Confirmation of specific mutation
  • Eligibility for gene specific therapies
  • Predictive value for disease progression
  • Carrier testing for family members
  • Prenatal diagnosis options
NEUROLOGY

Electrophysiology (EMG/NCS)

Before genetic testing was widespread, Electromyography (EMG) and Nerve Conduction Studies (NCS) were routine. Now, they are reserved for cases where the genetic test is unclear. NCS measures how fast and strong the electrical signals are in the nerves, distinguishing between demyelinating (slow) and axonal (weak) neuropathies.

  • Measurement of nerve conduction velocity
  • Distinction of axonal vs demyelinating damage
  • Assessment of repetitive nerve stimulation (Myasthenia)
  • Localization of the lesion
  • Needle EMG to assess motor unit recruitment

Needle EMG involves inserting a fine needle into the muscle to listen to its electrical activity. It can differentiate between a muscle problem (myopathy) and a nerve problem (neuropathy). While uncomfortable, it provides critical physiological data, especially for disorders of the neuromuscular junction like Myasthenia Gravis.

  • Differentiation of myopathic vs neurogenic changes
  • Detection of membrane instability
  • “Jitter” analysis for junction disorders
  • Sedation requirements for young children
  • Guidance for biopsy site selection

Muscle Biopsy and Histopathology

Muscle biopsy involves surgically removing a small piece of muscle for analysis under a microscope. Once the primary diagnostic tool, it is now a second or third line option. It is used when genetic testing fails to find an answer or to study the protein structure in inflammatory myopathies.

  • Open or needle muscle biopsy
  • Histological staining (H&E, ATPase)
  • Immunohistochemistry for specific proteins
  • Electron microscopy for structural details
  • Analysis of mitochondrial function

The biopsy can reveal specific structural changes, such as “nemaline rods” or “central cores,” which give congenital myopathies their names. It can also show inflammation in autoimmune conditions. Special stains show the absence of proteins like dystrophin, confirming the diagnosis at a tissue level.

  • Identification of specific structural defects
  • Assessment of dystrophin protein presence
  • Diagnosis of inflammatory myopathies
  • Evaluation of metabolic storage material
  • Definitive diagnosis for VUS (Variants of Uncertain Significance)

30 Years of
Excellence

Trusted Worldwide

With patients from across the globe, we bring over three decades of medical

Book a Free Certified Online
Doctor Consultation

Clinics/branches
Assoc. Prof. MD. Halil Can Assoc. Prof. MD. Halil Can Neurology
Group 346 LIV Hospital

Reviews from 9,651

4,9

Was this article helpful?

Was this article helpful?

We're Here to Help.
Get in Touch.

Send us all your questions or requests, and our expert team will assist you.

Doctors

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Why is the CK level so high?
CK is an enzyme that lives inside muscle cells; when the muscle is damaged or fragile (like in dystrophy), it leaks out into the blood, causing the levels to skyrocket.
The nerve conduction part feels like small static shocks, and the EMG involves a thin needle; it is uncomfortable, so we often use sedation or distraction for children.

Targeted tests for SMA or Duchenne can come back in a few days, but broad gene panels or exome sequencing usually take 4 to 8 weeks to analyze completely.

Nowadays, we usually start with a simple blood test for genetics. We only do a biopsy if the genetic test comes back negative or inconclusive and we still suspect a disease.

Liver enzymes (AST/ALT) are also found in muscles. High levels often prompt doctors to check the liver, but in these kids, it usually comes from muscle breakdown, not liver disease.

Spine Hospital of Louisiana

Let's Talk About Your Health

BUT WAIT, THERE'S MORE...

Leave your phone number and our medical team will call you back to discuss your healthcare needs and answer all your questions.

Let's Talk About Your Health

How helpful was it?

helpful
helpful
helpful
Your Comparison List (you must select at least 2 packages)