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1.
Ann Hematol ; 97(8): 1399-1406, 2018 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29568992

ABSTRACT

Haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplant (haplo-HSCT) is an upfront and effective therapy for hematology patients, but it usually has many complications, such as neurological complications. As one of the neurological complications following haplo-HSCT, immune-mediated demyelinating diseases of the central nervous system (CNS) seriously affect a patient's quality of life. However, the incidence, risk factors, and pathogenesis of CNS demyelination are not very well understood. Thirty of the 1526 patients (1.96%) suffered from CNS demyelination. In univariate analysis, we found that blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability and the CSF IgG synthesis index (IgG-Syn) were related to the occurrence of CNS demyelination (p < 0.05). In a multivariate analysis, the IgG-Syn (OR = 1.017, 95% CI 1.003-1.031, p = 0.019) and CSF anti-myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody (MOG.Ab) (OR = 12.059, 95% CI 1.141-127.458, p = 0.038) were independently associated with the onset of CNS demyelination. We also studied the possible pathogenesis of CNS demyelination. Immune reconstitution (the cell proportions of CD19+ B cells, CD3+ T cells, and CD4+ T cells); the counts of leucocytes, lymphocytes, monocytes, and platelets; and the levels of immunoglobulins A, G, and M 30, 60, and 90 days after HSCT showed no significant differences between CNS demyelination and no demyelination (p > 0.05). The probabilities of overall survival showed no significant differences between patients with and without demyelination (p > 0.05). Only four deaths in 30 patients, but bringing projected survival to less than 20%.We imply that IgG-Syn and CSF MOG. Ab may be associated with the onset of CNS demyelination during 2 weeks of neurological symptoms in patients with brain or spinal cord MRI abnormality. Immune reconstitution may not be the pathogenesis of CNS demyelination.


Subject(s)
Antibody Formation/immunology , Autoantibodies/immunology , Demyelinating Diseases/cerebrospinal fluid , Demyelinating Diseases/immunology , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation , Immunoglobulin G/immunology , Myelin-Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein/immunology , Adolescent , Adult , Autoantibodies/cerebrospinal fluid , Child , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Demyelinating Diseases/therapy , Female , Haplotypes , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation/adverse effects , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/cerebrospinal fluid , Male , Middle Aged , Prognosis , Siblings , Transplantation, Homologous , Young Adult
2.
Lancet Neurol ; 17(2): 133-142, 2018 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29275979

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In 2016, the Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Multiple Sclerosis (MAGNIMS) network proposed modifications to the MRI criteria to define dissemination in space (DIS) and time (DIT) for the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis in patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS). Changes to the DIS definition included removal of the distinction between symptomatic and asymptomatic lesions, increasing the number of lesions needed to define periventricular involvement to three, combining cortical and juxtacortical lesions, and inclusion of optic nerve evaluation. For DIT, removal of the distinction between symptomatic and asymptomatic lesions was suggested. We compared the performance of the 2010 McDonald and 2016 MAGNIMS criteria for multiple sclerosis diagnosis in a large multicentre cohort of patients with CIS to provide evidence to guide revisions of multiple sclerosis diagnostic criteria. METHODS: Brain and spinal cord MRI and optic nerve assessments from patients with typical CIS suggestive of multiple sclerosis done less than 3 months from clinical onset in eight European multiple sclerosis centres were included in this retrospective study. Eligible patients were 16-60 years, and had a first CIS suggestive of CNS demyelination and typical of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, a complete neurological examination, a baseline brain and spinal cord MRI scan obtained less than 3 months from clinical onset, and a follow-up brain scan obtained less than 12 months from CIS onset. We recorded occurrence of a second clinical attack (clinically definite multiple sclerosis) at months 36 and 60. We evaluated MRI criteria performance for DIS, DIT, and DIS plus DIT with a time-dependent receiver operating characteristic curve analysis. FINDINGS: Between June 16, 1995, and Jan 27, 2017, 571 patients with CIS were screened, of whom 368 met all study inclusion criteria. At the last evaluation (median 50·0 months [IQR 27·0-78·4]), 189 (51%) of 368 patients developed clinically definite multiple sclerosis. At 36 months, the two DIS criteria showed high sensitivity (2010 McDonald 0·91 [95% CI 0·85-0·94] and 2016 MAGNIMS 0·93 [0·88-0·96]), similar specificity (0·33 [0·25-0·42] and 0·32 [0·24-0·41]), and similar area under the curve values (AUC; 0·62 [0·57-0·67] and 0·63 [0·58-0·67]). Performance was not affected by inclusion of symptomatic lesions (sensitivity 0·92 [0·87-0·96], specificity 0·31 [0·23-0·40], AUC 0·62 [0·57-0·66]) or cortical lesions (sensitivity 0·92 [0·87-0·95], specificity 0·32 [0·24-0·41], AUC 0·62 [0·57-0·67]). Requirement of three periventricular lesions resulted in slightly lower sensitivity (0·85 [0·78-0·90], slightly higher specificity (0·40 [0·32-0·50], and similar AUC (0·63 [0·57-0·68]). Inclusion of optic nerve evaluation resulted in similar sensitivity (0·92 [0·87-0·96]), and slightly lower specificity (0·26 [0·18-0·34]) and AUC (0·59 [0·55-0·64]). AUC values were also similar for DIT (2010 McDonald 0·61 [0·55-0·67] and 2016 MAGNIMS 0·61 [0·55-0·66]) and DIS plus DIT (0·62 [0·56-0·67] and 0·64 [0·58-0·69]). INTERPRETATION: The 2016 MAGNIMS criteria showed similar accuracy to the 2010 McDonald criteria in predicting the development of clinically definite multiple sclerosis. Inclusion of symptomatic lesions is expected to simplify the clinical use of MRI criteria without reducing accuracy, and our findings suggest that needing three lesions to define periventricular involvement might slightly increase specificity, suggesting that these two factors could be considered during further revisions of multiple sclerosis diagnostic criteria. FUNDING: UK MS Society, National Institute for Health Research University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre, Dutch MS Research Foundation.


Subject(s)
Demyelinating Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Multiple Sclerosis/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain Stem/diagnostic imaging , Cerebellar Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Cerebellar Diseases/mortality , Cerebral Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Cohort Studies , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Multiple Sclerosis/mortality , Neurologic Examination , Optic Nerve/diagnostic imaging , Optic Neuritis/diagnostic imaging , Optic Neuritis/mortality , Spinal Cord/diagnostic imaging
4.
Brain Inj ; 27(5): 565-9, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23473007

ABSTRACT

AIM: This article provides and reviews hypotheses to help explain the poorly understood phenomenon of delayed neurological injury following lightning or electrical injury. METHOD: A review of extant literature provides a starting point to integrate what is already known in an attempt to provide new hypotheses for this phenomenon, as well as to discuss existing hypotheses. RESULT: The author proposes two theories which stem from the literature on the damaging effects of oxidative stress, and also reviews an existing hypothesis, the electroporation hypothesis. The former two theories can account for delayed damage which is either of vascular or nonvascular origin. The electroporation hypothesis can explain changes both in cases where there is cellular loss as well as cases where there only appears to be change in function after lightning or electrical injury. CONCLUSION: Although all theories discussed are speculative, the formation of hypotheses is always a starting point in the scientific process. In cases where there is delayed neurological damage with a vascular origin, it is possible that free radicals resulting from oxidative stress may gradually damage spinal vascular endothelial cells, cutting off blood supply, and ending in death of spinal neurons. When the delayed condition is demyelination without vascular damage, it is possible that the free radicals from oxidative stress are formed directly from the lipids found in abundance in myelin cells. The electroporation hypothesis, the formation of additional pores in neurons, may best explain immediate or progressive changes in structure and function after lightning or electrical injury.


Subject(s)
Demyelinating Diseases/physiopathology , Electric Injuries/physiopathology , Lightning , Oxidative Stress , Paresthesia/physiopathology , Trauma, Nervous System/physiopathology , Demyelinating Diseases/etiology , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Disease Progression , Electric Injuries/mortality , Electroporation , Female , Humans , Male , Neurons , Paresthesia/etiology , Paresthesia/mortality , Time Factors , Trauma, Nervous System/etiology , Trauma, Nervous System/mortality
5.
Tohoku J Exp Med ; 229(2): 97-105, 2013 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23303272

ABSTRACT

Hyponatremia is prevalent before liver transplantation and generally corrected immediately after transplantation. However, the clinical significance of correction rate of hyponatremia is not well investigated. The prognostic impact of pre-transplant serum sodium concentrations and post-transplant correction rate of hyponatremia were assessed. A total of 512 patients who received orthotopic liver transplants were enrolled. The correction rate of hyponatremia (delta sodium, ΔNa) was calculated based on the data collected during the first 48 hours following liver transplantation. Outcomes, including in-hospital mortality, delirium, neurological complications, acute kidney injury, and infections, were compared according to the serum sodium levels (sNa < 125, 125-135, and ≥ 135 mmol/L), and the risk factors for in-hospital mortality and neurological complications were analyzed using multivariate logistic regression methods. Patients with severe hyponatremia (sNa < 125 mmol/L) had higher rates of in-hospital mortality (9.6%, P = 0.010), delirium (54.8%, P = 0.003), neurological complications (24.7%, P = 0.003), and acute kidney injury (57.5%, P = 0.005). In multivariate analysis, serum sodium levels (OR = 0.975, P = 0.402) and delta sodium (OR = 1.097, P = 0.066) were not independent risk factors for in-hospital mortality. However, delta sodium (OR = 1.093, P = 0.003) and fast correction rate of hyponatremia (ΔNa ≥ 12 mmol/L/24h, OR = 3.397, P = 0.023) were significantly associated with post-transplant neurological complications. Pre-transplantation hyponatremia was not independently associated with clinical outcomes. However, rapid correction of hyponatremia is an independent risk factor for the development of post-transplant neurological complications.


Subject(s)
Central Nervous System Diseases/etiology , Demyelinating Diseases/etiology , Hyponatremia/therapy , Liver Transplantation/adverse effects , Postoperative Complications , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Brain/physiopathology , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/mortality , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/pathology , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/surgery , Central Nervous System Diseases/mortality , Central Nervous System Diseases/physiopathology , Child , Child, Preschool , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Demyelinating Diseases/physiopathology , Female , Hospital Mortality , Humans , Hyponatremia/complications , Hyponatremia/diagnosis , Hyponatremia/mortality , Inappropriate ADH Syndrome/therapy , Liver Cirrhosis/mortality , Liver Cirrhosis/pathology , Liver Cirrhosis/surgery , Liver Neoplasms/mortality , Liver Neoplasms/pathology , Liver Neoplasms/surgery , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Risk Factors , Sodium/blood , Survival Rate , Young Adult
6.
Anat Rec (Hoboken) ; 294(5): 847-57, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21416627

ABSTRACT

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressively fatal, incurable, neurodegenerative disorder. In this study, we investigated whether olfactory ensheathing cells (OEC) transplantation could provide protection to motor neurons and enable remyelination in mutant SOD1(G93A) transgenic rats with ALS. Seventy-two rats were divided into four groups: SOD1(G93A) rats (n = 20); medium+SOD1(G93A) rats (n = 20); OECs+SOD1(G93A) rats (n = 24); and another eight wild-type rats were used as controls. About 5 µL (1 × 10(5)) OECs in DF12 medium was injected into the dorsal funiculus of the thoracic spinal cord at a predetermined depth. Survival analysis revealed a significant increase in the survival time in OEC+SOD1(G93A) rats. Body weight records and inclined board test showed a significant difference between OEC+SOD1(G93A) and SOD1(G93A) from the onset at 7 days to 11 days (P < 0.05). Four weeks following transplantation, motor neuron counts in the ventral horn of the spinal cord noted a significant motor neuron loss in SOD1(G93A) rats when compared with wild-type rats (P < 0.001), and much less neuronal loss and collapse was noted in OEC+SOD1(G93A) rats when compared with SOD1(G93A) rats(P < 0.001); immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis of choline acetyltransferase supported the motor neuron count. Images of confocal microscope indicated that the transplanted OECs had survived for more than 4 weeks and migrated 4.2 mm through the spinal cord. Evidence of remyelination of transplanted OEC was captured with triple fluorescence labeling of green fluorescent protein, neurofilament, and myelin basic protein and was further confirmed by Western blot analysis of MPB. In conclusion, the transplanted OECs could serve as a source of neuroprotection and remyelination to modify the ALS microenvironment.


Subject(s)
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/surgery , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Mutation/genetics , Neuroprotective Agents , Olfactory Bulb/transplantation , Spinal Cord Injuries/surgery , Superoxide Dismutase/genetics , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/enzymology , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Demyelinating Diseases/prevention & control , Disease Models, Animal , Male , Motor Neurons/cytology , Nerve Degeneration , Olfactory Bulb/cytology , Olfactory Bulb/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Cord Injuries/enzymology , Superoxide Dismutase/metabolism , Superoxide Dismutase-1 , Survival Rate
7.
J Am Soc Nephrol ; 21(12): 2099-108, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21051736

ABSTRACT

Osmotic demyelination syndrome is a devastating neurologic condition that occurs after rapid correction of serum sodium in patients with hyponatremia. Pathologic features of this injury include a well-demarcated region of myelin loss, a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, and infiltration of microglia. The semisynthetic tetracycline minocycline is protective in some animal models of central nervous system injury, including demyelination, suggesting that it may also protect against demyelination resulting from rapid correction of chronic hyponatremia. Using a rat model of osmotic demyelination syndrome, we found that treatment with minocycline significantly decreases brain demyelination, alleviates neurologic manifestations, and reduces mortality associated with rapid correction of hyponatremia. Mechanistically, minocycline decreased the permeability of the blood-brain barrier, inhibited microglial activation, decreased both the expression of IL1α and protein nitrosylation, and reduced the loss of GFAP immunoreactivity. In conclusion, minocycline modifies the course of osmotic demyelination in rats, suggesting its possible therapeutic use in the setting of inadvertent rapid correction of chronic hyponatremia in humans.


Subject(s)
Demyelinating Diseases/prevention & control , Hyponatremia/drug therapy , Minocycline/pharmacology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Blood-Brain Barrier/drug effects , Demyelinating Diseases/etiology , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Demyelinating Diseases/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Administration Schedule , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Hyponatremia/complications , Immunohistochemistry , Male , Osmosis , Random Allocation , Rats , Statistics, Nonparametric , Survival Rate
8.
J Neuroimmunol ; 226(1-2): 143-6, 2010 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20538349

ABSTRACT

We prospectively assessed the risk of second relapse in 192 patients with clinically isolated syndromes (CIS) divided into three groups: patients lacking oligoclonal IgG bands (OC-IgG, 25.7%), those showing OC-IgG (52.4%), and those with both OC-IgG and lipid-specific IgM bands (LS-OC-IgM, 22%). OC-IgG increased 9.3-fold the risk compared to lacking OC-IgG; OC-IgG+LS-OC-IgM increased the risk 39.6-fold compared to not having OC-IgG and 4.4-fold compared to having only OC-IgG. Median time to second relapse was 0.7 years for patients with OC-IgG+LS-OC-IgM and 3.3 years for those with only OC-IgG. Therefore, CSF analysis identifies CIS patients at risk of second relapse.


Subject(s)
Demyelinating Diseases/immunology , Demyelinating Diseases/metabolism , Oligoclonal Bands/blood , Oligoclonal Bands/cerebrospinal fluid , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Demyelinating Diseases/pathology , Female , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/blood , Immunoglobulin G/cerebrospinal fluid , Immunoglobulin M/blood , Immunoglobulin M/cerebrospinal fluid , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Longitudinal Studies , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Recurrence , Risk Factors , Young Adult
9.
Genetics ; 176(3): 1835-44, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17483407

ABSTRACT

After intracerebral inoculation, Theiler's virus induces in its natural host, the mouse, an acute encephalomyelitis followed, in susceptible animals, by chronic inflammation and primary demyelination. Susceptibility to demyelination among strains of laboratory mice is explained by the capacity of the immune system to control viral load during persistence. Also, differences of susceptibility to viral load between the susceptible SJL strain and the resistant B10.S strain are mainly due to two loci, Tmevp2 and Tmevp3, located close to the Ifng locus on chromosome 10. In this article, we show that the Tmevp3 locus controls both mortality during the acute encephalomyelitis and viral load during persistence. Most probably, two genes located in the Tmevp3 interval control these two different phenotypes with efficiencies that depend on the age of the mouse at inoculation. Il22, a member of the IL-10 cytokine family, is a candidate gene for the control of mortality during the acute encephalomyelitis.


Subject(s)
Demyelinating Diseases/genetics , Interleukins/genetics , Theilovirus , Animals , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Encephalomyelitis , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Mice , Nervous System Diseases , Survival Rate , Interleukin-22
10.
Acta pediatr. esp ; 60(6): 316-320, jun. 2002. ilus
Article in Es | IBECS | ID: ibc-12894

ABSTRACT

La panencefalitis esclerosante subaguda (PEES) es una infección por virus lentos, progresiva y poco frecuente del sistema nervioso central; el virus del sarampión es uno de los agentes implicados. Las primeras manifestaciones clínicas consisten en cambios de la personalidad, conducta agresiva y deterioro de la función intelectual. Más adelante, aparecen crisis mioclónicas, crisis convulsivas generalizadas tonicoclónicas, hipertonía y coreoatetosis, parálisis bulbar progresiva, hipertermia y posturas de decerebración. El diagnóstico se establece mediante el hallazgo de anticuerpos antisarampionosos en el liquido cefalorraquídeo, el EEG con ondas lentas de alto voltaje y resonancia con focos hiperintensos. El tratamiento antirretroviral es controvertido. La muerte sobreviene en el plazo de uno a dos años desde el comienzo de la sintomatología. Se presenta el caso de un paciente de 6 años con diagnóstico de ataxia aguda y estudios normales. En pocas semanas repite un cuadro similar; advirtiéndose un deterioro neuropsíquico y aparición de movimientos anómalos. Ante el deterioro progresivo, con aumento de las crisis motoras convulsivas, se reestudia el caso y se observa la aparición de actividad eléctrica anómala y una resonancia con incipientes alteraciones de tipo hiperintenso frontales. Ante la enfermedad progresiva con alteración cliniconeurológica, electrofisiológica y de imágenes, se considera la posibilidad de una PEES, dados sus antecedentes de infección sarampionosa a los 8 meses de vida, lo que se comprueba mediante una elevada dosificación de IgG. Ante la confirmación diagnóstica se instituye tratamiento sintomático para las crisis motoras (benzodiacepinas, valproato, haloperidol), medicación antiviral (isoprinosina) e inmunoglobulinas. El propósito de este estudio consiste en mostrar una complicación muy poco frecuente del sarampión, pero que conlleva a una elevada morbimortalidad y que, además, es una enfermedad prevenible mediante la vacunación masiva, especialmente en épocas de brotes epidémicos (AU)


Subject(s)
Male , Child , Humans , Inosine Pranobex/administration & dosage , Inosine Pranobex/therapeutic use , Encephalitis/complications , Encephalitis/diagnosis , Encephalitis/therapy , Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis/complications , Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis/diagnosis , Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis/drug therapy , Measles/complications , Measles/diagnosis , Measles/mortality , Spinal Puncture/methods , Haloperidol/therapeutic use , Diazepam/therapeutic use , Neurologic Manifestations , Demyelinating Diseases/complications , Demyelinating Diseases/diagnosis , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Measles/immunology , Measles/prevention & control , Electroencephalography/methods , Electroencephalography
11.
J Neurovirol ; 5(4): 421-9, 1999 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10463864

ABSTRACT

To evaluate the benefit of combined antiretroviral therapy including protease inhibitors (CART) on survival time and neurological progression in patients with AIDS-related progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), 81 consecutive PML cases, collected between January 1990 and June 1998, were reviewed. Fifteen patients were neuropathologically proven. JC virus detection in CSF was positive in 59 patients. At PML diagnosis, median CD4 cell count was low (median, 35 cells/microL) and plasma HIV load, determined in 41 patients, was high (median, 4.8 log10 copies/ml). Following PML diagnosis, there was a significant difference (P<10(-4)) in survival between patients who were untreated or treated with nucleoside analogs (n=50, median: 80 days) and patients who were started early on CART (n=23, median: 246 days). A third group of eight patients who received CART late during the course of PML was considered separately. At the study endpoint, 18 of all the CART-treated patients (n=31) were still alive. Plasma HIV load was undetectable in 67% of them. The median increase in CD4 cell count was 112 cells/microL from CART onset. In contrast, no significant improvement in neurological status was observed. Our results demonstrate a benefit of CART on survival of AIDS-related PML patients and suggest the need for an early, specific anti-JC virus treatment to limit the neurological deterioration.


Subject(s)
AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections/drug therapy , AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections/mortality , Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , HIV , JC Virus , Leukoencephalopathy, Progressive Multifocal/drug therapy , Leukoencephalopathy, Progressive Multifocal/mortality , Organophosphonates , AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections/virology , Adult , CD4 Lymphocyte Count , Cidofovir , Cytosine/analogs & derivatives , Cytosine/therapeutic use , Demyelinating Diseases/drug therapy , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Demyelinating Diseases/virology , Female , France , HIV/genetics , HIV/isolation & purification , HIV Long-Term Survivors , HIV Protease Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Humans , JC Virus/genetics , JC Virus/isolation & purification , Leukoencephalopathy, Progressive Multifocal/virology , Male , Middle Aged , Organophosphorus Compounds/therapeutic use , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies , Survival Rate , Time Factors , Viral Load
12.
Nat Med ; 3(1): 54-9, 1997 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8986741

ABSTRACT

There is a lack of effective means of promoting remyelination of the central nervous system (CNS) in humans with chronic demyelinating disease. We have investigated the ability of transplanted glia to myelinate areas of the CNS equivalent to focal demyelinated lesions in multiple sclerosis (MS). In these studies we show that transplantation of oligodendrocytes or their progenitors into the CNS of a neonatal or adult canine myelin mutant results in repair of large areas similar in size to many MS plaques. Progenitor or pre-progenitor cells of the oligodendrocyte lineage have the greatest capacity for myelination following grafting, although cells of neonatal origin may also be used. Such an approach may therefore have therapeutic value in the repair of focal lesions in human myelin disease.


Subject(s)
Demyelinating Diseases/therapy , Dogs , Neuroglia/transplantation , Age Factors , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Central Nervous System/pathology , Demyelinating Diseases/genetics , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Disease Models, Animal , Fetus/cytology , Humans , Male , Mutation , Survival Rate
13.
Clin Neuropathol ; 14(4): 228-32, 1995.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8521627

ABSTRACT

In 3 out of 20 patients with sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (sALS), cranial magnetic resonance imaging detected multiple demyelinating lesions. All 3 patients died from definite upper and lower motor neuron degeneration. In all 3 cases total cerebro-spinal fluid (CSF) protein remained within normal ranges, and a blood-CSF barrier dysfunction was not detectable. In one of the patients multifocal CNS demyelination coincided with an intrathecal synthesis of immunoglobulin-G and autochthonous CSF oligoclonal IgG banding (OCB) early in disease. Neither absolute or age-corrected survival nor disease progression differed for patients with and without cerebral MR lesions, or normal vs. elevated CSF total protein. Evaluating the CSF in an extended patient sample (n = 29), we found the total CSF protein elevated in 5 of 16 men and none of 13 women (p < 0.05). The mean age-corrected CSF protein content [practical reference limit = (age x 3.3) + 300 mg/l] was higher in male (465 mg/l +/- 32 SE) than in female (350 mg/l +/- 26 SE) sALS patients (p < 0.01). This coincides with a male preponderance in sALS.


Subject(s)
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/pathology , Brain/pathology , Cerebrospinal Fluid Proteins/analysis , Demyelinating Diseases/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Periodicity , Adult , Aged , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/cerebrospinal fluid , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/mortality , Case-Control Studies , Demyelinating Diseases/cerebrospinal fluid , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Disease Progression , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Sex Distribution , Survival Rate
14.
Lakartidningen ; 86(20): 1905-7, 1989 May 17.
Article in Swedish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2733505

ABSTRACT

Central pontine myelinolysis is a life-threatening condition involving the demyelination of axons in certain areas of the brain. It has been shown almost invariably to occur in connection with hospital care. In recent years, a connection has been noted between the rapid restitution of low serum sodium and the development of the condition. In this review, the most recent scientific information is summarized. It is concluded that the risk should always be considered in treating a hyponatremic patient. The serum sodium level should be raised slowly and the acute treatment ended before normal serum sodium levels are reached, ie when the patient is still slightly hyponatremic.


Subject(s)
Demyelinating Diseases/etiology , Hyponatremia/complications , Pons/pathology , Demyelinating Diseases/mortality , Demyelinating Diseases/pathology , Humans , Hyponatremia/mortality , Hyponatremia/therapy , Myelin Sheath/pathology , Risk Factors
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