from PART IV - SPORADIC DISEASES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
Multiple sclerosis
Introduction
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is the most common chronic neurological disorder in young and middle-aged adults. It involves exclusively the central nervous system (CNS). It is an inflammatory disorder consecutive to the formation of venule-centered areas, or plaques, scattered haphazardly. These plaques contain reactive cells and harbor myelin and axonal damage. Whether remyelination is a constant feature is at issue, but, if it is present, it is clearly ineffective at restoring myelin and axonal integrity. The consensus is that MS is an atypical autoimmune disorder (Reder and Antel, 1983). A genetic contribution to the etiology has been deduced from family studies (Sadovnick et al., 1997, 1998). MS is twice as common in women than it is in men, and affects predominantly Caucasians (Whitacre et al., 1999). The most classical clinical manifestation of MS is a relapse, which is an acute or subacute episode of neurological dysfunction lasting several weeks, followed by a remission. Relapses are unpredictable in time course, severity, duration, and site of lesion. MS course is usually protracted, only five or six years of overall longevity being lost (Sadovnick et al., 1992). Although still incurable, therapeutic breakthroughs have been attained that partially decrease the formation of new plaques (Paty and Hartung, 1999).
Multiple sclerosis seems to be a modern affliction, there apparently being no mention of this disease in ancient medical texts, or in those of the Middle Ages. The earliest accounts of MS are of St Lidwina of Schiedam of Holland (1380–1433) by Godfried Sonderbank, and by Sir Frederick d'Este from the UK (1794–1848) in his diary (Firth, 1948).
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