Localized bioimpedance analysis is a novel, noninvasive technique with potential application to neuromuscular disease. In this procedure, high-frequency alternating current is passed through muscle, and parameters related to the consequent voltage pattern are evaluated. Currents flowing perpendicular to muscle fibers encounter many more cell membranes than do currents flowing parallel to them, producing surface voltage patterns that are altered by disease. Using this technique, 45 normal subjects and 25 patients with various neuromuscular diseases were studied, including 4 with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, 4 with inflammatory myopathy, and 11 with inclusion-body myositis. Two parameters, the spatially averaged phase and the effective longitudinal resistivity, were altered in patients with neuromuscular disease. Reductions in phase correlated to disease progression, whereas normalization of phase correlated with disease remission. In patients with inclusion-body myositis, a unique pattern of reduced phase and elevated resistivity was identified. These findings suggest that localized bioimpedance analysis has the potential of playing a substantial role in the diagnostic and therapeutic evaluation of neuromuscular disease.
Copyright 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.