Inflammatory and Autoimmune Flashcards
What is multiple sclerosis?
Inflammatory demyelinating disease of the CNS, defined by neurological dysfunction in at least two areas of the CNS (brain, spinal cord, OPTIC NERVES), that are separated in time and space (McDonald criteria).
What are the types of MS? (x4)
- RELAPSING-REMITTING: clinical attacks of demyelination with complete recovery in between attacks
- CLINICALLY ISOLATED SYNDROME: single attack of demyelination (does not qualify as MS)
- PRIMARY PROGRESSIVE: stead accumulation of disability with no clear relapsing-remitting pattern
- MARBURG VARIANT: severe fulminant variant leading to advanced disability of death within weeks
What is the aetiology of MS?
Autoimmune with environmental trigger in genetically pre-disposed individual
What are the risk factors of MS? (x3)
EBV, prenatal vitamin D levels and deficiency, smoking
What is the pathophysiology of MS?
T cells access CNS through BBB infiltration. Immune-mediated damage to CNS myelin results in impaired conduction along axons, with eventual axonal damage from autoimmune and inflammatory damage. There is also associated grey matter atrophy (CNS cell bodies).
What is the epidemiology of MS: Type? Gender? Age?
Most common type is relapsing-remitting. More common in females. Presents 20-40.
What are the optic signs and symptoms of MS? (x6)
- OPTIC NEURITIS (swelling that affects optic nerve; most common symptom): unilateral deterioration in visual acuity and colour perception.
- There may be pain on eye movement.
- Fundoscopy shows swollen optic nerve head, with optic atrophy in chronic disease
- Visual field testing shows central scotoma (optic nerve affected) or field defects (optic radiations affected)
- Relative afferent pupillary defect: both pupils dilate when light shone in affected eye
- Internuclear ophthalmoplegia: lateral horizontal gaze produces a failure of adduction of the contralateral eye, indicating lesion of contralateral medial longitudinal fasciculus
What are the extra-ocular signs and symptoms of MS? (x6)
- SENSORY: paraesthesia, burning pain
- MOTOR: paraplegia and UMN signs such as spasms, stiffness, brisk reflexes
- CEREBELLAR: limb ataxia (intention tremor, past-pointing and dysmetria on finger-nose test and heel-shin test), dysdiadochokinesis, ataxic wide-based gait
- UHTHOFF’S PHENOMENON: transient increase or recurrence of symptoms due to conduction block precipitated by rise in body temperature
- LHERMITTE’S PHENOMENON: electric shock-like sensation in arms and legs precipitated by neck flexion
- Constipation and urinary frequency
What are the investigations for MS? (x3)
- MRI BRAIN, CERVICAL AND THORACIC SPINE: gadolinium (contrast)-enhancing inflammatory lesions with limited oedema in brain, grey matter atrophy, and spinal hypo-intensity (or black holes)
- LP: microscopy to exclude other infective/inflammatory causes. CSF electrophoresis shows unmatched oligoclonal bands
- EVOKED POTENTIALS: delayed conduction velocity
What is Guillain-Barre syndrome?
Acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy.
What is the aetiology of GBS? (x3)
- Idiopathic in 40%
- Post-infection (1-3 weeks): bacterial (e.g., Campylobacter jejuni), HIV, herpes viruses, Zika virus outbreaks
- Malignancy (lymphoma, Hodgkin’s)
- Post-vaccination
What is the pathophysiology of Guillain-Barre syndrome?
Inflammatory process where antibodies react with self-antigen on myelin or neurons leading to demyelination. Rare axonal variants of GBS may be associated with no demyelination.
What are the signs and symptoms of Guillain-Barre syndrome? (x6) Disease course? Consideration of alternative diagnosis?
- COURSE: progressive symptoms of less than 1 month duration of:
- Ascending symmetrical limb weakness (lower > upper) associated with FLACCID PARALYSIS on examination and bilateral hypotonia
- Ascending paraesthesia
- Arreflexia
- There may also be cranial nerve involvement (dysphagia, dysarthria, facial weakness (LMN), bulbar symptoms). If there is pupil constriction, consider botulism
- Respiratory muscles affected if severe and affects 30% who will need ventilation
- Autonomic dysfunction: postural hypotension and arrythmias
- Back or leg pain is reported in most patients
What is the Miller-Fisher variant of Guillain-Barre syndrome?
Associated with ophthalmoplegia, ataxia and arreflexia.
What is dysarthria?
Motor speech disorder of slurring words due to loss of control of larynx and tongue