In patients with mild clinical symptoms, drug treatment is often unnecessary.
Life style
- Relaxation techniques and stress avoiding (well known provocative factor) are beneficial
- Avoiding periods of longer rest or maintenance of same position helps with muscle stiffness control
- Sudden movements after prolonged rest should be avoided in order to prevent muscle injuries and falls
- Warm up phenomenon
- Exercise and stretching is recommended to improve flexibility, especially in Achilles tendons which frequently require surgical lengthening
Drug treatment
Mexiletine
- Mexiletine is most often the first choice for treatment of myotonia, based on its efficacy and mostly benign adverse effect profile. It is a antiarrhythmic agent, which acts on fast-acting voltage-gated sodium channels. Its half-life is 10 to 12 h.
- Standard dosage is 150 mg to 200 mg in adults and 1 to 8 mg/kg per day given two to three times a day given with meal in order to prevent gastrointestinal side-effects.
- Treatment starts with lowe dose which increases over time. Patients are advised to stop tretament every few years to sure that treatment is still warranted
- Because rapid discontinuation can cause a rebound in myotonia and stiffness, the drug should be tapered in 50-mg increments every few days.
- Contraindications: patients with severe cardiac arrhythmias, cardiomyopathy, or coronary artery disease. It should also not be used in patients with an allergic response to lidocaine or lidocaine derivatives
- Side-effects: epigastric symptoms (20% of patients) that can be alleviated if the drug is taken with food, lightheadedness (10%,), skin rash (3%). Other side-effects are anxiety, headaches, and coordination difficulties.
Tocainide
- Tocainide is a lidocaine derivative that acts on the sodium channel. It has been shown to be as effective as mexiletine in controlling myotonia. However, because it has a depressive effect on bone marrow, it is considered a second-line agent for the treatment of myotonia congenita. Its half-life is 15 h.
- Standard dosage is 200 mg twice a day. It can be increased up to 1,200 to 1,600 mg/d divided in two or three doses
- Contraindications: patients with severe cardiac arrhythmias, cardiomyopathy, or coronary artery disease and patients allergic to lidocaine and its derivates. Tocainide should be avoided in any patient with a history of bone marrow suppression.
- Side effects: dizziness (11%), lymphadenopathy (3%), nausea, anxiety, and tremor.
Carbamazepine
- Carbamazepine works by reducing post-tetanic potentiations and is thought to stabilize the muscle membrane. Its half-life is 12 to 17 h.
- Contraindications: hypersensitivity to tricyclic antidepressants or a history of recent use of monoamine oxidase inhibitors. It also should be avoided in patients with a history of increased intraocular pressure, liver and kidney disease
- Side effects : somnolence, changes in ECG, dizziness, blurred vision, lack of coordination, increased liver enzymes
Phenytoin
- Phenytoin works as voltage-dependent sodium and calcium channel modulator
Drugs to avoid
- Beta-agonists, beta-blockers, acetilcholiesterase inhibitors – worsen myotonia
- Colchicin- causes muscle weakness
Anesthesia in patients with myotonia
- Patients with congenital myotonia have an increased risk for development of malignant hyperthermia
- Suxamethonium, succinylcholine, and propofol can induce myotonia
- It should be taken into consideration that patients should be kept warm during surgery