Clinical meaning
Post-polio syndrome (PPS) is a condition that affects survivors of acute paralytic poliomyelitis, typically emerging 15 to 40 years after the initial poliovirus infection. It is estimated to affect 25-40% of polio survivors and represents one of the most common motor neuron diseases in North America. The pathophysiology of PPS is rooted in the original poliovirus damage and subsequent compensatory mechanisms. During the acute poliomyelitis infection, the poliovirus selectively destroys anterior horn motor neurons in the spinal cord and motor nuclei in the brainstem. These lower motor neurons innervate skeletal muscle fibers through motor units (one motor neuron plus all the muscle fibers it innervates). When motor neurons are destroyed, the muscle fibers they innervated become denervated and would normally atrophy. However, surviving motor neurons compensate through a process called axonal sprouting: each surviving motor neuron extends new axonal branches (sprouts) to reinnervate the orphaned muscle fibers from destroyed neurons. A single surviving motor neuron that originally innervated 200 muscle fibers may eventually innervate 1000 to 2000 fibers through sprouting. This compensatory reinnervation can be remarkably effective, explaining the functional...
