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Equine malignant hyperthermia (EMH)

General description

Equine Malignant Hyperthermia (EMH) is a life-threatening pharmacogenetic disorder of skeletal muscle elicited by halogenated anesthetics, depolarizing muscle relaxants, and stress. Clinical and laboratory manifestations include tachycardia, hyperthermia, muscle rigidity, rhabdomyolysis, respiratory and metabolic acidosis, and electrolyte derangements.

Breeds

Appaloosa, Paint Horse, Quarab, Quarter Horse, Quarter pony

Order details
Test number8160
AbbreviationEMH
Sample material0.5 ml EDTA blood, mane/tail hair roots
Test duration3-5 working days
Test specifications
Symptom complexsystemic
Inheritanceautosomal dominant
Causalitycausally
LiteratureOMIA:000621-9796
Detailed description

Equine Malignant Hyperthermia (EMH) is a life-threatening pharmacogenetic disorder of skeletal muscle elicited by halogenated anesthetics, depolarizing muscle relaxants, and stress. Dysfunction of RyR1 (calcium release channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscle) results in excessive release of calcium into the myoplasm-triggering cascade events that lead to a hypermetabolic state and ultimately cell death. Clinical and laboratory manifestations include tachycardia, hyperthermia, muscle rigidity, rhabdomyolysis, respiratory and metabolic acidosis, and electrolyte derangements.