Glycogen storage disease type V, also known as McArdle disease, is a rare inherited condition that affects how muscles use stored energy, leading to unusual fatigue and discomfort during physical activity that most people take for granted.
Understanding the Outlook for Glycogen Storage Disease Type V
When someone receives a diagnosis of glycogen storage disease type V, one of the first questions that naturally comes to mind concerns what the future holds. The prognosis for this condition is generally encouraging, though it requires understanding and adaptation. People with this disease can live a normal lifespan by managing their diet and physical activity appropriately.[1] This is not a condition that shortens life expectancy when properly managed, which provides significant reassurance to those affected and their families.
The outlook varies considerably from person to person, reflecting the diverse ways this condition manifests. In most individuals with glycogen storage disease type V, muscle weakness tends to worsen gradually over time. However, this is not universal—approximately one-third of affected individuals experience stable muscle weakness that does not progress.[1] Some people experience only mild symptoms such as poor stamina, while others may not experience any noticeable symptoms at all. This variability means that two people with the same genetic condition can have quite different lived experiences.
The condition typically becomes apparent during a person’s teens or twenties, though symptoms can emerge anywhere from infancy through adulthood.[1] Many people notice their symptoms in childhood, with studies showing that the median age when symptoms first appear is around 3 years old.[2] However, there is often a significant delay before the correct diagnosis is made. The median time between when symptoms begin and when the diagnosis is confirmed is approximately 29 years.[2] This lengthy delay is primarily due to the condition being misdiagnosed or symptoms being dismissed, which can significantly impact quality of life.
Despite the challenges, proper management can dramatically improve outcomes. Studies have shown that patients with this condition can live independently and cope well with daily activities when they receive appropriate guidance and support.[4] The key to a positive prognosis lies in early and accurate diagnosis, followed by education about how to manage physical activity safely and effectively.
How the Disease Develops Without Treatment
Understanding the natural progression of glycogen storage disease type V helps explain why proper management is so important. Without appropriate guidance and lifestyle adjustments, the condition follows a predictable pattern that can lead to increasingly limiting symptoms and potentially serious complications.
At the cellular level, the disease stems from the body’s inability to break down glycogen—a complex sugar stored in muscles—into glucose, the simple sugar that muscles need for energy.[1] This happens because muscle cells lack a crucial enzyme called myophosphorylase, which normally breaks glycogen into a simpler form that can then be converted into usable energy. Without this enzyme, glycogen accumulates in muscle tissues like a fuel tank that cannot be tapped, leaving muscles without adequate energy during physical activity.
If left unmanaged, people with this condition typically experience progressively worsening exercise intolerance. The muscles become easily fatigued because they cannot access their stored energy reserves effectively.[1] What starts as difficulty with strenuous activities like jogging or weight lifting can gradually extend to affect more routine physical tasks. Simple activities that most people take for granted—climbing stairs, carrying groceries, or even standing for extended periods—can become increasingly challenging.
Without proper education about activity management, individuals may inadvertently push through the pain and fatigue, believing that building endurance requires working through discomfort. This approach, while well-intentioned, can be harmful for people with glycogen storage disease type V. Continuing to exercise beyond the point of muscle pain can trigger episodes of muscle breakdown, medically known as rhabdomyolysis.[1] During these episodes, muscle tissue breaks down rapidly, releasing proteins and other cellular contents into the bloodstream.
Over time, repeated episodes of muscle damage without proper management can lead to the development of fixed muscle weakness, particularly in the larger muscle groups near the body’s core, such as those in the hips and shoulders.[4] This progressive weakness is more common in people of advanced age and occurs in approximately 25% of affected individuals.[4] Once this fixed weakness develops, it cannot be reversed, which is why preventing muscle damage through proper activity management is so crucial.
The natural history of the disease also includes the potential for increasing social and psychological difficulties. Without a proper diagnosis and understanding of their condition, people may be labeled as lazy, unmotivated, or attention-seeking when they struggle with physical activities that others find easy.[3] This misunderstanding can lead to isolation, reduced self-esteem, and mental health challenges that compound the physical difficulties of the condition.
Possible Complications
While glycogen storage disease type V can be managed effectively, it carries the risk of several significant complications that require awareness and vigilance. The most serious of these is rhabdomyolysis, a potentially life-threatening condition that affects approximately half of people with this disease.[1]
Rhabdomyolysis occurs when muscle tissue breaks down rapidly, releasing a protein called myoglobin into the bloodstream. When myoglobin reaches the kidneys, it must be filtered out of the blood and eliminated in the urine, a process called myoglobinuria.[1] The presence of myoglobin gives the urine a distinctive burgundy, red, or brown color, which serves as a warning sign. This protein can be toxic to the kidneys, and it is estimated that approximately half of individuals with glycogen storage disease type V who experience myoglobinuria will develop life-threatening kidney failure.[1] This kidney damage can occur suddenly and requires immediate medical attention, often including hospitalization for intensive treatment.
Episodes of rhabdomyolysis are typically triggered by prolonged or intense exercise, particularly activities that involve sustained muscle contraction without movement, known as isometric exercise. Examples include heavy lifting, squatting, or standing on tiptoes.[5] However, even activities that seem moderate can trigger muscle breakdown if they exceed an individual’s current capacity. What makes this particularly challenging is that the threshold for triggering rhabdomyolysis can vary from person to person and even from day to day in the same individual.
Another concerning complication is the development of muscle contractures—a condition where muscles become temporarily stuck in a shortened position and cannot relax.[3] These contractures are different from the muscle cramps that many people experience; they represent a more severe and prolonged muscle rigidity that can be quite painful and may last for hours or even days. In rare cases, severe contractures combined with muscle swelling can lead to compartment syndrome, a medical emergency where pressure builds up within a muscle compartment, potentially cutting off blood supply and causing permanent damage to muscles and nerves.
Beyond these acute complications, there are concerns about long-term effects. The development of permanent muscle weakness occurs in about a quarter of people with this condition and tends to affect the larger muscle groups closest to the body’s center.[4] This weakness can progressively limit mobility and independence, particularly as individuals age. The weakness is more likely to develop in those who have experienced repeated episodes of muscle injury over time.
There are also rare but severe forms of the disease. An extremely rare infant-onset form can cause profound muscle weakness from birth, leading to what doctors call “floppy baby syndrome,” along with respiratory failure.[3] Additionally, a very uncommon late-adult-onset form presenting after age 70 can cause severe muscle wasting in the arms and legs, sometimes with drooping eyelids and stooped posture.[3] These unusual presentations highlight the wide spectrum of how this genetic condition can manifest.
The psychological impact of delayed diagnosis or misdiagnosis represents another form of complication. Years of being told that symptoms are “in your head” or being labeled as someone who just needs to “try harder” can lead to significant mental health challenges, including depression and anxiety.[3] These psychological complications can be as debilitating as the physical symptoms and require their own form of attention and care.
Impact on Daily Life
Living with glycogen storage disease type V means learning to navigate a world designed for people whose muscles can access stored energy on demand. The impact on daily life extends far beyond the medical symptoms, touching nearly every aspect of how a person lives, works, and connects with others.
Physical limitations are the most obvious way this condition affects daily life. Activities that most people perform without a second thought can become significant challenges. Climbing a flight of stairs, carrying groceries from the car, or even standing while cooking dinner can trigger the characteristic muscle pain and fatigue.[1] Many people with this condition find that they need to plan their days carefully, considering how much physical activity each task will require and budgeting their limited muscle energy accordingly.
One of the more frustrating aspects of the condition is its unpredictability in social situations. A person might feel fine walking to a restaurant but then struggle significantly on the return journey. Social events that involve standing for long periods, such as concerts or parties, can become sources of anxiety rather than enjoyment. The need to rest frequently can make social outings awkward, especially when others don’t understand the condition or mistake the need for rest as a lack of interest.
Work life presents its own set of challenges. Jobs that require sustained physical activity, such as construction, nursing, or retail work involving long periods of standing, may be difficult or impossible to maintain.[4] Even office jobs can pose challenges if they require walking between buildings, carrying equipment, or attending off-site meetings that involve significant physical activity. The need to explain the condition to employers and request accommodations can feel awkward or embarrassing, particularly for those who were misdiagnosed for years and told their symptoms weren’t real.
Exercise and sports, which many people use for stress relief and social connection, require a completely different approach for people with this condition. Traditional advice to “push through the pain” or “no pain, no gain” is not just unhelpful—it can be dangerous.[3] Instead, individuals must learn to recognize their bodies’ signals and stop activity before reaching the point of muscle damage. The characteristic “second wind” phenomenon, where symptoms improve after a brief rest during exercise, can be helpful—people often find that if they pause when symptoms first appear and wait a few minutes, they can resume activity with much less discomfort.[1]
Despite these challenges, many people with glycogen storage disease type V develop effective coping strategies. Learning to warm up gently before any physical activity and to pace activities throughout the day can significantly improve function.[5] Some find that consuming simple sugars before exercise provides muscles with readily available glucose, helping prevent symptoms and possibly protecting against muscle breakdown.[4] Walking or brisk walking, rather than running or intense sports, often becomes the preferred form of exercise, as moderate-intensity aerobic activity tends to be better tolerated than intense bursts of effort.
The emotional and mental health impact can be profound. Years of struggling with symptoms before diagnosis often leave people feeling validated when they finally have a name for their condition, but also grieving for the lost years when they thought something was wrong with them personally rather than with their biochemistry.[3] Anxiety about triggering rhabdomyolysis can lead some people to become overly cautious, avoiding physical activity to a degree that actually reduces their fitness and makes everyday tasks even harder.
Family life requires adjustments as well. Parents with this condition may struggle to keep up with active children, and children with the condition may feel different from their peers in physical education classes or during playground activities. The need to explain the condition repeatedly to teachers, coaches, and other caregivers can become exhausting. Planning family outings requires consideration of physical demands, access to rest areas, and proximity to medical care in case of emergencies.
However, it’s important to note that many people with glycogen storage disease type V report living full, independent lives when they receive proper diagnosis and education.[4] Learning to work with the condition rather than against it, understanding personal limits, and developing a lifestyle that balances activity with rest can lead to a satisfying quality of life. Many find that the condition teaches valuable lessons about listening to their bodies, planning ahead, and finding creative solutions to challenges.
Support for Family Members
When a family member has glycogen storage disease type V, the entire family becomes part of the journey. Understanding how to provide effective support, particularly in the context of potential clinical trials, can make a meaningful difference in the patient’s experience and outcomes.
Family members should first understand that clinical trials for glycogen storage disease type V are particularly important given that currently no specific cure exists for the condition.[4] While dietary interventions and exercise modifications help manage symptoms, researchers continue to search for treatments that could address the underlying enzyme deficiency. Clinical trials represent hope for better treatments and potentially even curative approaches in the future, such as gene therapy strategies being explored for similar metabolic conditions.
Supporting a loved one in finding and preparing for clinical trial participation begins with education. Family members can help by researching available trials together, looking at resources such as the National Institutes of Health clinical trials database. Understanding the purpose of different trial phases helps set realistic expectations. Early phase trials typically focus on safety and determining how a treatment works in the body, while later phases examine whether treatments actually improve symptoms or prevent complications.
Practical support is invaluable when considering trial participation. Clinical trials often require multiple visits to research centers, which may be located far from home. Family members can assist with transportation, help coordinate schedules, and provide companionship during long appointment days. Keeping organized records of trial visits, any symptoms experienced, and questions that arise between appointments helps ensure that important information isn’t forgotten during rushed medical visits.
Emotional support throughout the trial process is equally important. Participating in research can bring hope but also anxiety—hope that a new treatment might help, but worry about unknown risks or the possibility that the treatment won’t work. Family members can provide a listening ear and help maintain perspective. If a trial involves a placebo group, there’s the additional emotional challenge of not knowing whether the patient is receiving the active treatment or not. Understanding and accepting these uncertainties together as a family can ease the emotional burden.
Families should also understand the importance of early detection for relatives who might be at risk. Since glycogen storage disease type V follows an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern, siblings of affected individuals have a 25% chance of also having the condition if both parents are carriers.[1] When family-specific genetic mutations are known, relatives can undergo testing to determine their status. Early detection in at-risk family members ensures proper management from childhood, potentially preventing muscle injury and improving long-term outcomes, particularly by developing healthy exercise habits early in life.[4]
Families can help by encouraging regular, moderate exercise such as brisk walking from childhood onward, which research suggests can improve outcomes.[4] Rather than protecting affected family members from all physical activity out of fear of triggering symptoms, the goal is to help them find the right types and amounts of activity that build fitness without causing harm. This might mean helping younger family members learn to recognize early warning signs of muscle fatigue and teaching them that it’s okay to stop and rest, something that goes against the cultural messages about pushing through pain that most children receive.
Family members can also assist in creating an environment that supports good management practices. This might include keeping simple carbohydrates readily available for consumption before exercise, helping plan meals that include adequate protein, and understanding the importance of gentle warm-ups before any physical activity.[4] Being prepared to recognize and respond to warning signs of complications, such as knowing to seek immediate medical attention if urine becomes dark or burgundy-colored, provides an important safety net.
Connection with support organizations can benefit the entire family. Groups such as the Association for Glycogen Storage Disease provide information, connect families facing similar challenges, and often share updates about ongoing clinical trials.[5] These connections can be particularly valuable for families navigating the journey from initial diagnosis through finding effective management strategies and potentially participating in research that could benefit future generations.


