Inflammatory Cortical Demyelination in Early Multiple Sclerosis
Mayo Clinic in Florida · Mayo Clinic · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Cortical disease has emerged as a critical aspect of the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis, being associated with disease progression and cognitive impairment. Most studies of cortical lesions have focused on autopsy findings in patients with long-standing, chronic, progressive multiple sclerosis, and the noninflammatory nature of these lesions has been emphasized. Magnetic resonance imaging studies indicate that cortical damage occurs early in the disease.
We evaluated the prevalence and character of demyelinating cortical lesions in patients with multiple sclerosis. Cortical tissues were obtained in passing during biopsy sampling of white-matter lesions. In most cases, biopsy was done with the use of stereotactic procedures to diagnose suspected tumors. Patients with sufficient cortex (138 of 563 patients screened) were evaluated for cortical demyelination. Using immunohistochemistry, we characterized cortical lesions with respect to demyelinating activity, inflammatory infiltrates, the presence of meningeal inflammation, and a topographic association between cortical demyelination and meningeal inflammation. Diagnoses were ascertained in a subgroup of 77 patients (56%) at the last follow-up visit (at a median of 3.5 years).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 50.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
13Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Multiple sclerosis
- Pathology
- Brain biopsy
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- White matter
- Cortex (anatomy)
- Hyperintensity
- Good health and well-being