Multiple Sclerosis Flashcards
1
Q
What is multiple sclerosis?
A
- Idiopathic inflammatory demyelinating disease of the CNS
- To be classified as MS lesions are disseminated in time and space
- Acute episodes of inflammation are associated with focal neurological deficits
- Demyelination results in loss of neurological function (i.e. weak leg, visual loss, urinary incontinence)
- Deficits develop gradually, last for more than 24hrs and may gradually improve over days to weeks
- Later in untreated disease patients may become progressively more disabled
2
Q
What syndromes can develop into MS?
A
- Optic neuritis (painful visual loss, reduced colour vision - red desaturation, pain on eye movement and enlarged blind spot)
- Clinically isolated syndromes (single episode of neurological disability due to focal CNS inflammation)
- Transverse myelitis (inflammatin of the spinal cord, weakness, sensory loss, incontinence)
- Radiologically isolated syndromes (found on MRI)
3
Q
What are the symptoms of MS? (bold most common)
A
- Central (fatigue, cognitive impairment, depression, unstable mood)
- Visual (nystagmus, optic neuritis, diplopia - 6th nerve palsy)
- Speech (dysarthria)
- Throat (dysphagia)
- MSK (weakness, spasms, ataxia - sensory or cerebellar)
- Sensation (pain, hypoesthesias, parasthesias)
- Bowel (incontinence, diarrhoea or constipation)
- Urinary (incontinence, frequency or retention)
4
Q
How is MS diagnosed?
A
- Evidence of 2 or more episodes of demyelination disseminated in space and time
- MRI (with gadolinium contrast, evidence of demyelination in 2 regions)
- LP (CSG oligoclonal bands with matched blood sample)
- Bloods (B12/folate, serum ACE, lyme serology, ESR/CRP, ANA/ANCA/Rheumatoid factor, aquaporin-4 antibodies)
- Visual evoked potentials (slower conduction if optic neuritis in the past)
- For optic neuritis:
- Central scotoma (enlarged blind spot)
- Pain on eye movement
- Impaired colour vision
- RAPD
5
Q
What are the different subtypes of MS?
A
- Clinically isolated syndrome (single episode - cannot be diagnosed as MS)
- Relapsing remitting (attacks followed by remission)
- Secondary progressive (intial attacks and remission then periods with no remission)
- Primary progressive (steady increase in disability)
- Progressive relapsing (steady decline since onset with superimposed attacks)
- Benign MS (fit diagnostic criteria but no disability)
NB - Can be active, not active, worsening, not worsening, progressive and not progressive.
6
Q
How is MS relapse treated?
A
- Managed by MDT
- Steroids spped up recovery from attacks (methylprednisolone IV)
- Disease modifying drugs can be given (alemtuzumab, natalizumab, fingolimod, dimethyl fumarate)
- Symptomatic treatments
- Exercise for muscle strength
- Medication for neurpathic pain (i.e. amitriptyline)
- Antidepressants for depression
- Anticholinergic medications for urge incontinence
- Medication for spasticity (i.e. baclofen, gabapentin)
7
Q
Pathophysiology of MS
A
- Myelin covers axons in the CNS and helps electrical impulse move faster along the axon
- Myelin provided by cells called Schwann cells (PNS) and oligodendrocytes (CNS)
- MS only affects CNS
- Inflamnmation around myelin and infiltration of immune cells damages the myelin
8
Q
Causes of MS
A
- Cause unclear but influenced by:
- Multiple genes
- EBV
- Low vitamin D
- Smoking
- Obesity