Myasthenia gravis is a rare autoimmune disease that affects the neuromuscular system. In autoimmune diseases, your immune system produces antibodies to attack your own healthy body cells.
- In myasthenia gravis, the antibodies attack your neuromuscular junction, which is the space between nerve and muscle, causing a problem with the signals sent between the nerves and the muscles.
- People who have myasthenia gravis experience fluctuating muscle weakness.
It's not clear why this happens, but it's been linked to issues with the thymus gland (a gland in the chest that's part of the immune system). Many people with myasthenia gravis have a thymus gland that's larger than normal. About1 in 10 people have an abnormal growth of the thymus called a thymoma.