Different pathological processes for acute white matter lesions in multiple sclerosis
The Malaysian Journal of Pathology
;
: 187-194, 2020.
Article
in English
| WPRIM
| ID: wpr-825066
ABSTRACT
@#Introduction:
Multiple sclerosis (MS) has variable clinical presentations, prognoses, pathogeneses, and pathological patterns. We conducted a pathological review of acute MS-associated lesions that focused on the degree of axonal injury, myelin loss, and glial reaction to determine whether the observed demyelination was of the primary or secondary type. Materials andMethods:
After searching the records for a 15-year period at the London Health Sciences Centre Pathology Department, we identified 8 cases of surgical acute lesion biopsies in which clinical MS diagnoses were made before or after the biopsy.Results:
The white matter pathologies in these cases could be sorted into 3 morphological patterns. The first pattern, which represents typical demyelinated plaques, was observed in 4 cases and was characterised by nearly complete demyelination accompanied by variable degrees of axon preservation and axonal swelling. The second pattern was observed in 3 cases and was characterised by demyelinating lesions containing variable numbers of myelinated axons mixed with a few demyelinated axons and variable numbers of axonal swellings. The myelinated axons ranged from scattered fibres to bands of variable thickness, and the demyelination was a mixture of primary and secondary demyelination. The third pattern was observed in 1 case and was characterised by well-demarcated areas of reduced myelin staining and numerous apoptotic nuclei. Axonal staining revealed many fragmented axons with reduced myelin staining but no definitely demyelinated axons.Conclusion:
This report shows that the predominant pathology underlying acute MS-related lesions is not limited to demyelination but can include axonal degeneration alone or in combination with primary demyelination which reflect different pathogenesis for these acute lesions.
Full text:
Available
Index:
WPRIM (Western Pacific)
Type of study:
Prognostic study
Language:
English
Journal:
The Malaysian Journal of Pathology
Year:
2020
Type:
Article
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