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Preface Part I. Overview of Pathologic and Pathogenic Comparison Between Sporadic Inclusion-Body Myositis and Hereditary Inclusion-Body Myopathies: 1. Newest approaches to diagnosis and pathogenesis of sporadic inclusion-body myositis and hereditary inclusion-body myopathies, including molecular-pathologic similarities to Alzheimer disease Part II. Historical Perspective: 2: Evolving concepts of inclusion-body myositis Part III. Sporadic Inclusion-Body Myositis - Clinical and Diagnostic Considerations: 3: Sporadic inclusion-body myositis: Clinical and laboratory features and diagnostic criteria 4: Inclusion-body myositis: natural history 5: Uncommon clinico-pathological forms of sporadic inclusion-body myositis: Report of four cases 6: Inclusion-body myositis: pathological changes 7: Unusual pathological forms of inclusion-body myositis, and neuromuscular disorders with IBM-like changes 8: Electrophysiological findings in inclusion-body myositis 9: Genetic factors in sporadic inclusion-body myositis Part IV. Hereditary Inclusion-Body Myopathies - Clinical and Diagnostic Considerations: 10: Hereditary inclusion-body myopathy in Jews of Persian origin: Clinical and laboratory data 11. Hereditary inclusion-body myopathy (h-IBM) with quadriceps sparing: epidemiology and genetics 12: Familial autosomal-recessive inclusion-body myositis with asymptomatic leukoencephalopathy 13: Welander distal myopathy - clinical, pathophysiological, and molecular aspects 14. Tibial muscular dystrophy - clinical, genetic, and morphological characteristics 15. Distal myopathy with rimmed vacuoles, inclusion-body myositis and related disorders in Japan 16. Inclusion-body myopathies 17. Is the muscle fiber in inclusion body-myositis an antigen-presenting cell of an innocent bystander? 18. Viruses, immunodeficiency and inclusion-body myositis 19. Myonuclear abnormalities may play a central role in the pathogenesis of muscle fiber damage in inclusion-body myositis 20. Nuclear degeneration and rimmed vacuole formation in neuromuscular disorders 21. Mitochondrial alterations in sporadic inclusion-body myositis 22. mtDNA analysis in muscle of patients with sporadic inclusion-body myopathy Part V. Treatment: 23. Evaluation of treatment for sporadic inclusion-body myositis 24. Personal experience in treating sporadic inclusion-body myositis Subject index.