THE MERCK MANUAL HOME HEALTH HANDBOOK
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Weakness

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Weakness refers to loss of muscle strength. That is, people cannot move a muscle normally despite trying as hard as they can. However, the term is often misused. Many people with normal muscle strength say they feel weak when they feel tired (see Symptoms and Diagnosis of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders: Fatigue) or when their movement is limited because of pain or joint stiffness.

For a person to intentionally move a muscle (called a voluntary muscle contraction), the brain must generate a signal that travels a pathway from

  • The brain
  • Through nerve cells in the brain stem and spinal cord
  • Through nerves from the spinal cord to the muscles (called peripheral nerves)
  • Across the connection between nerve and muscle (called a neuromuscular junction)

Also, the amount of muscle tissue must be normal, and the tissue must be able to contract in response to the signal from the nerves. Therefore, true weakness results only when one part of this pathway―brain, spinal cord, nerves, muscles, or the connections between them―is damaged or diseased.

Weakness may develop suddenly or gradually. Weakness may affect all of the muscles in the body (called generalized weakness) or only one part of the body. For example, depending on where the spinal cord is damaged, spinal cord disorders may cause weakness only of the legs.

Symptoms depend on which muscles are affected. For example, when weakness affects muscles of the chest, people may have difficulty breathing. When weakness affects muscles that control the eyes, people may have double vision. Complete muscle weakness causes paralysis. People may have other symptoms depending on what is causing the weakness. Weakness is often accompanied by abnormalities in sensation, such as tingling, a pins-and-needles sensation, and numbness.

Because malfunction in the same part of the signal pathway causes similar symptoms regardless of cause, the many causes of muscle weakness are usually grouped by the location of the cause (see Symptoms and Diagnosis of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders: Some Causes and Features of Muscle WeaknessTables). That is, causes are grouped as those that affect the brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves, muscles, or connections between nerves and muscles. However, some disorders affect more than one location.

Common causes: Causes differ depending on whether weakness is generalized or affects only specific muscles.

The most common causes of generalized weakness are

  • A decrease in general physical fitness (called deconditioning), which may result from illness and/or a decrease in physical reserves (frailty), such as muscle mass, bone density, and the heart's and lungs' ability to function, especially in older people
  • Loss of muscle tissue (wasting, or atrophy) due to long periods of inactivity or bed rest, as occurs in an ICU
  • Damage to nerves due to a severe illness or injury, such as severe or extensive burns
  • Certain muscle disorders, such as those due to a low level of potassium (hypokalemia), consumption of too much alcohol, or use of corticosteroids
  • Drugs used to paralyze muscles—for example, to keep people from moving during surgery or while on a ventilator

The most common causes of weakness in specific muscles are

  • Strokes (the most common cause of weakness affecting one side of the body)
  • A pinched nerve, as occurs in carpal tunnel syndrome
  • A ruptured or herniated disk in the spine
  • Pressure on (compression of) the spinal cord, as can result from cancer that has spread to the spinal cord
  • Multiple sclerosis

Less common causes: Many other conditions sometimes cause weakness (see Symptoms and Diagnosis of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders: Some Causes and Features of Muscle WeaknessTables). For example, electrolyte abnormalities (such as a low level of magnesium or calcium) can cause weakness that sometimes comes and goes, as well as muscle cramping and twitches.

Fatigue: Many people report weakness when their problem is actually fatigue. Common causes of fatigue include a severe illness, cancer, a chronic infection (such as HIV infection, hepatitis, or mononucleosis), heart failure, anemia, chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and mood disorders (such as depression).

First, doctors try to determine whether people are weak or simply tired. If people are weak, doctors then determine whether the weakness is severe enough or worsening quickly enough to be life threatening.

Warning signs: In people with weakness, the following symptoms are cause for concern:

  • Weakness that develops over a few days or less
  • Difficulty breathing
  • Difficulty raising the head while lying down
  • Difficulty chewing, talking, or swallowing
  • Loss of the ability to walk

When to see a doctor: People who have any warning sign should go to an emergency department immediately. Immediate medical attention is crucial because weakness accompanied by a warning sign can worsen quickly and cause permanent disability or be fatal. People without warning signs should call their doctor. The doctor can decide how quickly they need to be seen based on their symptoms and other disorders they have. For most of these people, a delay of a few days is not harmful.

If the weakness worsens gradually (over months to years), people should discuss the problem with their doctor at their next routine visit.

What the doctor does: Doctors first ask questions about the person's symptoms and medical history. Doctors then do a physical examination. What they find during the history and physical examination often suggests a cause and the tests that may need to be done (see Symptoms and Diagnosis of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders: Some Causes and Features of Muscle WeaknessTables).

Doctors ask people to describe in detail what they are experiencing as weakness. Doctors ask

  • When the weakness began
  • Whether it began suddenly or gradually
  • Whether it is constant or is worsening
  • Which muscles are affected
  • Whether and how the weakness affects the ability to do certain activities, such as breathing, brushing their teeth or hair, speaking, swallowing, standing up from a seated position, climbing stairs, and walking
  • Whether they have other symptoms that indicate malfunction of the nervous system, such as speech or vision problems, loss of sensation or memory, or seizures

What seems to be sudden weakness is sometimes gradual weakness, but people do not notice it until they can no longer do something, such as walking or tying their shoes.

Based on the description of weakness, doctors can often identify the most likely causes, as for the following:

  • A muscle disorder: Weakness beginning in the hips and thighs or the shoulders (that is, people have difficulty standing up or lifting their arms overhead) and no effect on sensation
  • A peripheral nerve disorder: Weakness beginning in the hands and feet (that is, people have difficulty lifting a cup, writing, or stepping over a curb) and loss of sensation

Doctors also ask about other symptoms, which may suggest one or more possible causes. For example, if people with back pain and a history of cancer report weakness in a leg, the cause may be cancer that has spread and put pressure on the spinal cord.

People are asked about symptoms that suggest fatigue or another problem, rather than true muscle weakness. People with true muscle weakness often report difficulty doing specific tasks, and the weakness follows a pattern (for example, becomes worse after walking). Fatigue tends to cause more general symptoms and does not follow a particular pattern. That is, it is present all the time and affects the whole body. Doctors ask about recent or current disorders that commonly cause fatigue, such as any recent severe illness or a mood disorder (such as depression).

Doctors ask about past and current use of drugs, including alcohol and recreational drugs. Whether family members have had similar symptoms can help doctors determine whether the cause is hereditary.

During the physical examination, doctors focus on the nervous system (neurologic examination—see Symptoms and Diagnosis of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders: Physical Examination) and muscles. Doctors test the cranial nerves (which connect the brain with the eyes, ears, face, and various other parts of the body), for example, by checking eye movements, the ability to speak clearly, and the ability to rotate the head.

Doctors observe how the person walks and check for other signs that the nervous system is malfunctioning, such as loss of coordination or sensation. Muscles are checked for size and unusual unintended movements (such as involuntary twitches and shaking). Doctors note how smoothly muscles move and whether there is involuntary resistance to movement (detected when doctors try to move a muscle that they have asked the person to relax).

Reflexes are checked. Reflexes are automatic responses to a stimulus. For example, doctors test the knee jerk reflex by gently tapping the muscle tendon below the kneecap with a rubber hammer. Normally, the knee then jerks involuntarily (see Symptoms and Diagnosis of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders: Reflexes). This evaluation helps doctors identify which part of the nervous system is probably affected, as for the following:

  • The brain or spinal cord: If reflexes are very easy to trigger and are strong
  • The nerves: If reflexes are hard to trigger and are slow or absent

Muscle strength is tested by asking the person to push or pull against resistance or to do maneuvers that require strength, such as walking on the heels and tiptoes or standing up.

A general physical examination is done to look for other symptoms that may suggest a cause, such as difficulty breathing.

Generally, if the history and physical examination do not detect specific abnormalities that suggest a brain, spinal cord, nerve, or muscle disorder, the cause is likely to be fatigue.

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Testing: If people have severe or rapidly progressing generalized weakness or any problems breathing, doctors first do tests to evaluate the strength of the respiratory muscles (pulmonary function tests—see Diagnosis of Lung Disorders: Pulmonary Function Testing (PFT)). Results of these tests help doctors estimate the risk of sudden, severe malfunction of the lungs (acute respiratory failure).

Other testing is done based on where doctors think the problem is:

  • Brain disorders: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or, if MRI is not possible, computed tomography (CT)
  • Spinal cord disorders: MRI or, when MRI is not possible, CT myelography and sometimes a spinal tap (lumbar puncture)
  • Peripheral nerve disorders (including polyneuropathies) and neuromuscular junction disorders: Electromyography and usually nerve conduction studies
  • A muscle disorder (myopathy): Electromyography, usually nerve conduction studies, and possibly MRI, measurement of muscle enzymes, muscle biopsy, and/or genetic testing.

Occasionally, MRI is not available or cannot be done—for example, in people who have a pacemaker, another implanted metal device, or other metal (such as shrapnel) in their body. In such cases, another test is substituted.

For CT myelography, CT is done after a needle is inserted into the lower back to inject a radiopaque dye into the fluid that surrounds the spinal cord. For electromyography, small needles are inserted into a muscle to record its electrical activity when the muscle is at rest and when it is contracting. Nerve conduction studies use electrodes or small needles to stimulate a nerve. Then doctors measure how fast the nerve transmits signals.

If people have no symptoms besides weakness and no abnormalities are detected during the examination, test results are usually normal. However, doctors sometimes do certain blood tests, such as

  • A complete blood cell count (CBC)
  • Measurement of levels of electrolytes (such as potassium, calcium, and magnesium), sugar (glucose), and thyroid-stimulating hormone
  • Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), which can detect inflammation

Blood tests are sometimes done to evaluate kidney and liver function and to check for the hepatitis virus.

If the cause is identified, it is treated if possible. If weakness began suddenly and causes difficulty breathing, a ventilator may be used.

Physical and occupational therapy can help people adapt to permanent weakness and compensate for loss of function. Physical therapy can help people maintain and sometimes regain strength.

As people age, the amount of muscle tissue and muscle strength tend to decrease. These changes occur partly because older people may become less active but also because the production of the hormones that stimulate muscle development decreases. Thus, for older people, bed rest during an illness can have a devastating effect. Compared with younger people, older people start out with less muscle tissue and strength at the beginning of the illness and lose muscle tissue more quickly during the illness.

Drugs are another common cause of weakness in older people because older people take more drugs and are more susceptible to side effects of drugs.

When evaluating older people who report weakness, doctors also focus on conditions that do not cause weakness but interfere with balance, coordination, vision, or mobility or that make movement painful (such as impaired vision or arthritis). Older people may mistakenly describe the effects of such conditions as weakness.

  • Many people mistakenly say they feel weak when they really mean they are tired or their movement is limited because of pain and/or stiffness.
  • True muscle weakness results only when one part of the pathway necessary for voluntary muscle movement (from brain to muscles) malfunctions.
  • If weakness becomes severe over a few days or less or if people have any warning sign (see Symptoms and Diagnosis of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders: Warning signs, they should see a doctor immediately.
  • Often, doctors can determine whether the problem is true muscle weakness and can identify the cause based on the pattern of symptoms and results of the physical examination.
  • Physical therapy is usually helpful in maintaining strength no matter what the cause of weakness is.

Last full review/revision August 2012 by Michael C. Levin, MD

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