MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

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MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology
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Transcript of MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

Page 1: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

Dr Mehran HomamDepartment of neurology

Page 2: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

Most common disabling condition in young adultsMost common demyelinating disorderChronic disease of the CNSProgresses to disability in majority of casesUnpredictable course / variety of signs and symptoms; sometimes mistaken for psych dxCurrent theory favors immunologic pathogenesis

Page 3: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

Piere Marie Charcot

This Disease (MS) without his name is meaningless!His students are

Babinski Zigmond feroid

Page 4: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.
Page 5: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

NORMAL CONDUCTION

Page 6: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

ABNORMAL CONDUCTION

Page 7: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

RESULTS OF DEMYELINATION

Conduction block at site of lesionSlower conduction time along affected nerveIncreased subjective feeling of fatigue secondary to compensation for neurologic deficits

Page 8: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

Principles

Female predominanceAge 20 to 40Relapsing remittingDissaminated in time and place(CNS)

Page 9: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

INITIAL SYMPTOMS

Double vision / blurred visionNumbness/weakness in extremitiesInstability while walkingProblems with bladder controlHeat intoleranceMotor weakness

**All symptoms can be precipitated by heat**

Page 10: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

SENSORY DISTURBANCES

Ascending numbness starting in feetBilateral hand numbnessHemiparesthesia/dysesthesiaGeneralized heat intoleranceDorsal column signs Loss of vibration/proprioception Lhermitte’s sign

Page 11: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

VISUAL DISTURBANCES

Unilateral or bilateral partial/complete intranuclear ophthalmoplegiaCN VI paresisOptic neuritis Central scotoma, headache, change

in color perception, retroorbital pain with eye movement)

Page 12: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

MOTOR DISTURBANCES

Weakness (mono-, para-, hemi- or quadriparesis)Increased spasticityPathologic signs (Babinski, Chaddock, Hoffman)Dysarthria

Page 13: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

Crebellar signs

NystagmusDysarthriaTremorDysmetriaTitubationStance and gait

Page 14: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

OTHER CLINICAL SIGNS

Urinary incontinence, incomplete emptying Set up for UTI’s

Cognitive and emotional abnormalities (depression, anxiety, emotional lability)FatigueSexual dysfunction

Page 15: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA

2attacks with laboratory evidence but no clinical evidence = PROBABLE MS WITH LABORATORY SUPORT2 attacks without lab abnormalities = CLINICALLY PROBABLE MS2 attacks with clinical evidence and lab support = LAB SUPPORTED DEFINITE MS2 attacks with clinical evidence of at least 2 lesions = CLINICALLY DEFINITE MS

Page 16: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

TYPES OF MS

Benign – 10%Relapsing-remitting – 40%Primary progressive – 10%Secondary chronic progressive – 40% of patients with originally relapsing-remitting course

Page 17: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

CLINICAL PRESENTATION

Episodes of neurologic dysfunction followed by stabilization/remissionRelapses can be rapid or gradual onsetMay persist or resolve over weeks to monthsRelapsing-remitting pattern is most common in MS

Page 18: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

COMPARATIVE GRAPHS

GRAPHS

Page 19: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

Primary CNS vasculitisPostinfectious encephalomyelitisLyme diseaseBehcet’s syndromeSarcoidosis / Sjogren’s diseaseB12 deficiency / tertiary syphylisLeukodystrophies of adulthood

Page 20: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

LABORATORY FINDINGS

CSFEvoked potentialsMRIBlood and urine

Page 21: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

CSF

Increased immunoglobulin concentration in >90% of patientsIgG index (CSF/serum) elevatedOligoclonal bands—85%Elevated protein—50%Modest increase in mononuclear cells

Page 22: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

EVOKED POTENTIALS

VER (visual evoked response)—75% abnormal regardless of optic neuritis hxBAER (brainstem auditory evoked response)—30% abnormalSSER (somatosensory evoked response) – 80% abnormal Helps distinguish peripheral from

central lesions

Page 23: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

MRI

**Caveat: ** Abnormal MRI without clinical evidence is not sufficient to confirm dx of MS……Absence of abnormal MRI in clinically definite MS doesn’t disprove diagnosis

Page 24: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

MRI FINDINGS

Patchy areas of white matter in paraventricular cerebral areasLesions in cerebellum/brainstem/ cervical and thoracic spinal cordGadolinium enhancement identifies active lesions Doesn’t correlate with increased

disease activity

Page 25: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

MRI – CONT’D

MRI is abnormal in: 90% of patients with definite MS 70% of patients with probable MS 30-50% of patients with possible MS

Page 26: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

CRITERIA FOR MRI DIAGNOSIS OF MS

Lesions abutting central ventriclesLesions with diameter of >0.6 cmLesions in the posterior fossa

**poor correlation between size and area of lesions and patient’s disability**

Page 27: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

ABNORMAL MRI--CEREBELLUM

Page 28: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

ABNORMAL MRI—OPTIC NERVE

Page 29: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

ABNORMAL MRI—CEREBRAL HEMISPHERES

CEREBRUM

Page 30: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

BLOOD AND URINE TESTS

Unremarkable and nonspecificAttempts underway to identify myelin breakdown products in urineMonitor as indicated (suspected UTI / nephrotoxicity / medication side effects)

Page 31: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

FAVORABLE PROGNOSTIC FACTORS

Female genderLow rate of relapses per yearComplete recovery from 1st attackLong interval between 1st and 2nd attackYounger age of onsetLater cerebellar involvementLow disability 2-5 years from dz onset

Page 32: MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS Dr Mehran Homam Department of neurology.

Thank you