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Demyelinating Disease August 27, 2010. Pathologic Criteria Destruction of myelin Sparing of other elements of the nervous tissue Infiltration of inflammatory.

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Presentation on theme: "Demyelinating Disease August 27, 2010. Pathologic Criteria Destruction of myelin Sparing of other elements of the nervous tissue Infiltration of inflammatory."— Presentation transcript:

1 Demyelinating Disease August 27, 2010

2 Pathologic Criteria Destruction of myelin Sparing of other elements of the nervous tissue Infiltration of inflammatory cells, prevascularly Particular distribution of lesions –white matter disease (contains myelinated fiber such as brainstem, thalamus, areas surrounding the ventricles) Relative lack of Wallerian degeneration or secondary degeneration

3 Classification of Demyelinating Disease Multiple sclerosis – Chronic relapsing encephalomyelopathic form – Acute multiple sclerosis Diffuse cerebral sclerosis Schilder’s and Concentric sclerosis of Balo Acute disseminated encephalitis Acute and sub acute necrotizing hemorrhagic encephalitis

4 Multiple Sclerosis Disease of young adults Commonly seen in temperate climates Subacute disease Relapses and remissions Objective evidence of anatomical lesion separated in space and time

5 Schumacher’s Criteria (1965) 1.There must be objective abnormalities on neurological examination attributable to dysfunction of the CNS. Symptoms alone, no matter how suggestive, cannot be accepted as diagnostic of MS. 2.On neurological examination or by history, there must be evidence of involvement of two or more separate parts of the CNS. (Comment: This second criterion is contradictory to the first: symptoms such as diplopia, monocular obscuration of vision, gait ataxia and urinary urgency and incontinence, all classical symptoms of MS, are frequently transient and very often not confirmed by neurological examination. They should not be discarded.) 3.The objective neurological evidence of CNS disease must reflect predominantly white matter involvement, i.e. fiber tract damage. More than a minor proportion of signs of lower motor neuron (brain stem, spinal nuclear gray matter, or peripheral nerve) dysfunction will disqualify a subject as having MS for purposes of an experimental trial of therapy.

6 Schumacher’s Criteria (1965) 4.The involvement of the neuraxis must have occurred temporally in one or the other of the following patterns. 1.In two or more episodes of worsening, separated by a period of 1 month or more, each episode lasting at least 24 h. 2.Slow or step-wise progression of signs and symptoms, over a period of at least 6 months. 5.The ages of the patient at the onset of the disease must fall within the range of 10–50 years inclusive. 6.The patient's signs and symptoms cannot be explained better by some other disease process, a decision that must be made by a physician competent in clinical neurology.

7 Frequency of Signs Spasticity or hyperreflexia or both (+) Babinski Absent abdominal reflexes Impaired position sense Impaired pain sensation Incomplete – Check the book!

8 Frequency of Various Symptoms Check the book

9 Course Exacerbations and remissions – Complete or nearly complete remission  chronic Acute – Rapid progressive – incomplete, check the book Progressive – Gradual worsening w/o well-delineated remission and relapses Benign – Few exacerbations (often mild) followed by complete recovery Subclinical – Demyelination in asymptomatic patients (autopsy)

10 Some Suggestive Signs/Symptoms Positive – Combination of pyramidal, cerebellar, posterior column, and brainstem signs – Internuclear opthalmoplegia Negative – Early development of dementia, seizures or extrapyramidal sign – Noncerebellar tremors, stupor, focal atrophy – Aphasia and fasciculations – Hearing loss and uveitis

11 Multiple Sclerosis The cause is unknown and effective treatment has not been identified Immunologic process is one of the major elements of the disease Environmental influence, possibly an infectious process, may contribute to the disease Genetic makeup influences susceptibility to the disease (polygenic)

12 Treatment Aimed at halting the progression – Beta-interferon-1a (Avonex) 31% decrease in exacerbations 55% incidence of systematic, flu-like symptoms Given once a month – Beta-interferon-1b (Betasteron) 34% decrease in exacerbation Given every other day 40% will develop antibodies – Glatiramen acetate (Copaxone) 29% decrease in exacervbations Given everyday No significant side effects – Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) 0.2 gm/kg monthly Disability scores improved, relapse cut in half Well-tolerated, few side-effects – Mitoxantrone (Novantrone)

13 Treatment failure – Severe side effects – 30 or more attacks per year – Steady disease progression In effective treatments – Hyperbaric oxygen – Long-term use of steroids – Linoleic acid supplementation

14 Treatment of acute exacerbations – IV methylprednisolone

15 Demyelinating Disease Courville et.al. – Acute onset of symptoms affecting young patients predominantly, and proven by autopsy as having CONCENTRIC SCLEROSIS (looks like tree rings/onion layers?)

16 Baló’s Sclerosis 33 patients – 6 M – 27 F Mean age: 28 years Is monophasic Infectious in nature High mortality/survival rate

17 Clinical Manifestations Headache Disturbance in communication Mental and behavioral changes Mutism Fever Other findings – Disturbance in consciousness

18 Diagnostic testing Evoked potentials – Series of electrophysiologic tests that help evaluate the function of specific elements of the Nervous system involve in MS

19 % prolongedPossible MSProbable MSDefinite MS VEP406085 SSEP507080 BAEP304070

20 CSF studies Normal RBC and glucose Normal or slightly elevated protein 5-20 mononuclear cells Intrathecal IgG synthesis – Inc IgG index or 24 hr synthesis rate – Increased Kappa


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