A 52-Year-Old Man Is | Weakness and Paralysis (Management) — 52yo Man | Neurology | MCCQE1 Q#13395

MCCQE1 Question #13395

Dimension of Care

Chronic Care

Activity

Management

Objective

Weakness and Paralysis

Section

Medicine / Family Medicine

Subject

Neurology

Last updated: February 2026
A 52-year-old man is assessed in a neuromuscular clinic for 8 months of progressive symmetric proximal muscle weakness, difficulty rising from a chair, climbing stairs, and mild dysphagia. He has had two near-falls recently and reports increasing fatigue. Past medical history includes hypertension and type 2 diabetes. Neurologic examination shows proximal weakness with preserved sensation, reduced knee reflexes, waddling gait, and mild neck flexor weakness. A chronic neuromuscular disorder is diagnosed, and disease-specific treatment is initiated. Which additional management intervention is most important to address medium- and long-term safety and psychosocial complications?
Full answer analysis and choices are available inside the practice session.