4.7 Article

Axonal loss in normal-appearing white matter in a patient with acute MS

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 7, Pages 1248-1252

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.57.7.1248

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Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [NS35058, NS38667] Funding Source: Medline

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Background: Brain imaging studies detect abnormalities in normal-appearing white matter in patients with MS. Objective: To investigate the histopathologic basis for these changes in autopsy tissue from a patient with MS with 9 months' disease duration and a terminal brain stem lesion. Methods: The brain stem and spinal cord were analyzed ultrastructurally and immunocytochemically for axons, myelin, and activated microglia/macrophages. Results: Pathologic findings were consistent with a terminal inflammatory demyelinated lesion at the cervicomedullary junction. The ventral spinal cord column, containing descending tracts, exhibited 22% axonal loss at segment C7, but grossly normal immunostaining for myelin. Confocal and electron microscopy revealed myelin sheaths without axonal content and initial stages of myelin degradation by activated microglia/macrophages among intact myelinated axons. Axonal number and appearance was normal in ascending sensory tracts. Conclusions: These studies confirm axonal degeneration in the absence of myelin loss as one histopathologic correlate to abnormal MR findings in patients with MS.

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