Cuyamycin Molecule looks promising for Myotonic Dystrophy Treatment

A new study published shows that a small molecule (Potential new treatment) disrupted the long CTG repeats but left short repeats mostly alone.This was tested in mice that had myotonic dystrophy and seemed to work well.  Here is a piece form the journal about the impact of this study

                                                     Significance
Development of small-molecule lead medicines that potently and specifically modulate RNA function is challenging. We designed a small molecule that cleaves r(CUG)exp, the RNA repeat expansion that causes myotonic dystrophy type 1. In cells and in an animal model, the small-molecule cleaver specifically recognizes the 3-dimensional structure of r(CUG)exp, cleaving it more selectively among transcripts containing short, nonpathogenic r(CUG) repeats than an oligonucleotide that recognizes RNA sequence via Watson-Crick base pairing. The small molecule broadly relieves disease-associated phenotype in a mouse model. Thus, small molecules that recognize and cleave RNA structures should be

Cugamycin-Mouse-Model

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Care recommendations for patients with myotonic dystrophy

Published in 2018 is a consensus based approach for the myotonic dystrophy patient community. This gives general guidelines on how to approach, test and intervene in patients lives to achieve the most optimum outcomes.

Care-recommendations-for-adulats-with-Myotonic-Dystrophy

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Care Recommendations for families with Congential Myotonic Dystrophy

This is a new consensus based article. It was written by 11 experts in the field of myotonic dystrophy and gives a good basic review of how to approach the families that have congenital myotonic dystrophy.

Concensus-based-care-recommendations-for-Congenital-Myotonic-Dystrophy

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Having Children while avoiding Myotonic Dystrophy Transmission

Many couples in which one partner has myotonic dystrophy want to have children. There is a study that looks at pre-Implant diagnosis here the threat of the disease is eliminated. This is a good route for many couples. If universal education were available it may be possible to greatly reduce this disease.

Preimplant-Study-Pregnancy-Myotonic-Dystrophy

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Increased cancer risk for patients with myotonic dystrophy

Conclusion: Patients with myotonic dystrophy may have an increased risk of thyroid cancer and choroidal melanoma
and, possibly, testicular and prostate cancers.

Increased-cancer-risks-in-Patients-with-myotonic-dystrophy

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