Article

Will the real multiple sclerosis please stand up?

Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta T2N 4N1, Canada.
Nature Reviews Neuroscience (impact factor: 26.48). 01/2012; 13(7):507-14. DOI:10.1038/nrn3275 pp.507-14
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Multiple sclerosis (MS) is considered to be an autoimmune, inflammatory disease of the CNS. In most patients, the disease follows a relapsing-remitting course and is characterized by dynamic inflammatory demyelinating lesions in the CNS. Although on the surface MS may appear consistent with a primary autoimmune disease, questions have been raised as to whether inflammation and/or autoimmunity are really at the root of the disease, and it has been proposed that MS might in fact be a degenerative disorder. We argue that MS may be an 'immunological convolution' between an underlying primary degenerative disorder and the host's aberrant immune response. To better understand this disease, we might need to consider non-inflammatory primary progressive MS as the 'real' MS, with inflammatory forms reflecting secondary, albeit very important, reactions.

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Keywords

'immunological convolution'
 
'real' MS
 
autoimmune
 
autoimmunity
 
degenerative disorder
 
dynamic inflammatory demyelinating lesions
 
inflammatory disease
 
inflammatory forms
 
non-inflammatory primary progressive MS
 
primary autoimmune disease
 
questions
 
relapsing-remitting course
 
surface MS
 
underlying primary degenerative disorder
 

Peter K Stys