What is Duchenne?
What is Duchenne? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Bill Procko   
Saturday, 14 February 2009 02:12

What is Duchenne?


About the Disease

Duchenne is a progressive muscle wasting disease. Boys with Duchenne are typically diagnosed before the age of five. Their muscles swell and joints become restricted because their bodies lack the ability to produce a protien needed to build more muscle cells. They are easily fatigued and have difficulty keeping up with others their age. Most Duchenne boys need a wheelchair between the ages of 10 and 12. The simplest of tasks, such as holding a fork or turning over in bed, becomes very difficult. In the later stages, heart and breathing muscles begin to fail. Historically, most boys with Duchenne have not survived their teens.

Gavin and Logan

Gavin and Logan- Brothers who both have DMD

One in every 3,500 boys worldwide (an estimated 20,000 babies annually) is afflicted with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. The disorder affects all ethnic and social groups. The gene mutation that causes Duchenne is usually passed from mother to son, but fully one-third of cases are spontaneous.

There is no cure…and it can happen in any family.

The Need for Research

Promising Duchenne research is being stalled due to lack of funding and bureaucracy. For the families of Duchenne boys, this is a tragedy. As other disease groups fought for federal funding, there was no muscular dystrophy organization fighting for those dollars.

As a direct result, our boys are not much better off than when they discovered the Duchenne gene. Compare this with Cystic Fibrosis, where a committed organization that was committed to research and used federal funding has doubled the life expectancy of their kids.

Life expectancy for Duchenne has barely improved. Take a look at these charts to see how research dollars save lives.

** This article was copied in part from the Cure Duchenne website.

Last Updated ( Friday, 03 April 2009 20:09 )