Multiple Sclerosis
Multiple
Sclerosis.
Multiple
sclerosis is a devastating illness, it affects the majority of women in
their prime soon after the birth of a child, robbing their happiness,
finance, and family lives, and produce lifelong disabilities, often
patients are bedridden or wheelchair bound. It is an autoimmune
disease but what triggers the misdirected immune response is still
unknown. Recent advances, in new blood and cerebrospinal fluid tests
and refinements in neuroimaging, made early detection of the disease
possible and newer drug therapies have increased the odds of
reversing or preventing the progression of the disease.
For
centuries physicians were treating patients with symptoms which we
know today as Multiple Sclerosis (MS) but they had no idea about the
nature of the illness was, until in 1868 a French physician Dr. Jean
Martin Charcot demonstrated scar tissue, which he called plaques, in the
brain and spinal cord at the postmortem examination of one of his
patients and correlated sites of lesions with patient's symptoms. In
1828 Dr. Louis Ranvier discovered that Oligodendrocytes produced
Myelin, the insulating layer around the axon (nerve fiber), which was destroyed in MS and caused patients' symptoms. Dr. Thomas River
identified immune cells that actually destroyed the myelin and subsequently, the immune cells were known as B cells and T cells. This led
the way to huge excitement in MS research and the discovery of new
drugs was possible. It was subsequently proved that T cells not only
damaged the myelin but also the axon and the nerve cells as well,
explaining the development of permanent disabilities in MS patients.
Most recent research indicates that MS autoimmune disease is related, if not the actual cause, to the two different metabolic paths the tissue resident T-cells can take. In normal people, the tissue resident T-cells use fatty acid- Oleic acid as the energy source in the suppression of excessive inflammatory activities. In MS patients the Oleic acid content of fatty tissue is deficient. Published reports show EB virus infection triggers immune reactions which are misdirected to myelin and destroy it.
One
of the three ways patients may present with Multiple Sclerosis (MS).
Relapsing
and Remitting: This is the usual presentation. Sudden onset of some or
all of the following symptoms - difficulty in focusing, double
vision, difficulty in maintaining balance, weakness of legs or
clumsiness of movements of hands, various sensory disturbances of
the limbs and trunk. Then a period of steady
improvement for months or years, then a return of the same symptoms and
more new symptoms appear. And the pattern then repeats at intervals.
Difficulty in voiding and retention of urine usually accompany.
Secondary
Progressive: in some of the above groups of patients years later a change in the behavior of the illness results in a steady
deterioration of the condition without any remission in between attacks.
Primary
Progressive: This type of presentation is less frequent. From the
onset, symptoms are progressive and relentless. Severe disability
followed by early death is common.
Another
type of MS is known as Devic's disease, patients present with sudden
blindness or no vision in the center of the visual field and are associated with loss of movement of both lower extremities with
sensory loss of both lower limbs (transverse myelitis).
Laboratory
Tests:
The
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) shows an increase in immunoglobulin
concentration, an increase in cell count of mixed cell types
(pleocytosis) and a narrow spike of gamma globulin on electrophoresis
(oligoclonal band). CSF cytokines CXCL13, TNF and IFNy are elevated in relapsing recurrent MS patients. Recently, various degradation products of myelin have been found in blood tests. These are, however, also seen in a few other
diseases of CNS.
Neuroimaging:
MRI
is the most sensitive modality to detect damaged myelin sheath of the
brain and the spinal cord in MS. Multiple areas of lesions of
varying sizes and ages should be present. Lesions are located in the
white matter above the caudate nucleus, around the ventricles,
cerebellum and the long tracts, both motor and sensory tracts of the spinal cord and optic nerves. MRI images are several types -T1, T2
weighted images, gadolinium enhanced images are many others. These
special images are taken to increase the sensitivity and specificity of the test.
Evoke
Potential Tests:
Delays
in response to visual, auditory, somatic sensory stimulation are
observed in this test by attaching recording electrodes to
appropriate points on the skull. In MS visual evoked potential test
is usually positive even when patients may not have eye symptoms.
Diagnosis:
Relapse
and remitting features of the disease, spastic paralysis, urinary
retention, gait and balance disturbances, pleocytosis and oligoclonal
band in the CSF with MRI of the brain and spinal cord showing evidence
of multiple lesions of varies stages of development should make the
diagnosis of MS with confidence. Certain infections of CNS like Lyme
disease, HIV, syphilis, should be excluded. Lupus, Sjogren syndrome,
lymphoma and subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord from
vitamin B12 deficiency should not be confused when making MS
diagnosis.
Treatment:
There
are increasing numbers of new drugs available for targeted therapy –
to induce remission of an acute attack, prevent the progression of the disease and reduce the frequency of attacks.
For
remission of acute attacks:
Intravenous
Methylprednisolone is given for 1 to 3 days followed by oral prednisone
in high doses until symptoms abate then the dose is slowly reduced.
Plasma
Exchange:
The blood of the patient is withdrawn and the plasma is separated from the
cells, the plasma is discarded, the cells are transfused back into an albumin solution. It is done in
cases where IV steroid therapy is ineffective.
Disease
Modifying Therapy (DMD): These are very briefly discussed under the heading - by injection and by oral route.
Drugs are given by subcutaneous injections or IV.
Glatiramer Acetate. It is a synthetic protein containing 4 basic antigenic amino acids of myelin. When injected in patients it attracts immunocytes CD4, CD8 and T cells and thus spares the myelin sheath from inflammatory effects; it also increases Thymic 2 T cells in the CNS which act as a suppressor of inflammation. Side effects are local reactions at the injection sites, flashing, chest pain and GI disturbances.
Interferon Beta: it is a polypeptide. It is normally produced by fibroblasts; for medical use, it is manufactured by engineered E. coli. When injected, it binds with the receptors on the surface of cells then directs the production of cytokines which results in a reduction of Thymic 17, a subset of T lymphocytes. It decreases the entry of immune cells into the brain and facilitates healing. Side effects are fever and chills like flu, and local reactions at the injection site, anxiety, and irritability.
Glatiramer Acetate. It is a synthetic protein containing 4 basic antigenic amino acids of myelin. When injected in patients it attracts immunocytes CD4, CD8 and T cells and thus spares the myelin sheath from inflammatory effects; it also increases Thymic 2 T cells in the CNS which act as a suppressor of inflammation. Side effects are local reactions at the injection sites, flashing, chest pain and GI disturbances.
Interferon Beta: it is a polypeptide. It is normally produced by fibroblasts; for medical use, it is manufactured by engineered E. coli. When injected, it binds with the receptors on the surface of cells then directs the production of cytokines which results in a reduction of Thymic 17, a subset of T lymphocytes. It decreases the entry of immune cells into the brain and facilitates healing. Side effects are fever and chills like flu, and local reactions at the injection site, anxiety, and irritability.
Humanized
monoclonal antibody:
Four
drugs of this group are approved for use in recurrent relapsing MS
and primary progressive MS.
1. Natalizumab.
It is an alpha 4 integrins blocker on the lymphocyte surface, preventing
it from binding with the endothelium of CNS blood vessels, preventing them from crossing the blood-brain barrier. Patients receiving it must be negative
for the JCV antibody test, otherwise, progressive multifocal
leukoencephalopathy (PML) may follow. An increased incidence of melanoma
transformation of cutaneous nevus is seen.
2. Rituximab.
It is an anti CD20 antibody. It causes apoptosis of beta cells of the
circulation; decreases complement and cellar cytotoxicity. Side
effects are patients become susceptible to infections and thrombotic events.
3. Ocrelizumab.
It is also an anti CD20 antibody.
4. Alemtuzumab.
It binds with CD52, expressed on the surface of T and B lymphocytes,
macrophages and eosinophils. Its use is associated with the reactivation
of CMV, listeria meningitis, ITP (Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic
Purpura), nephropathy and low TSH.
Oral
agents:
Fingolimod.
It is a sphingosine 1 phosphate analog (S1P). It binds with
receptors expressed on the surface of B and T lymphocytes. The fingolimod then
degrades the receptors and prevents the release of lymphocytes from the
lymph nodes. As a result, T and B lymphocyte cell numbers decrease in blood and
CNS. It also decreases Thymic 17 cells. Fingolimod crosses blood brain
barrier and protects neurons and helps repair damaged tissues.
Side
effects: Headache, rise in liver enzymes, macular edema, increased
chance of infections.
Teriflunomide.
It interrupts the pyrimidine synthesis of T and B lymphocytes. It
blocks inflammatory response. Side effects are headaches, raised
liver enzymes, alopecia, and nausea. It is teratogenic and should not
be used in pregnancy.
Dimethyl fumarate.
It decreases memory T cells and lowers Thymic 1 and Thymic 17 memory cells thereby
proinflammatory activities are decreased and also activates Th2 anti-inflammatory cell population. Side effects are flushing, abdominal
pain, skin rashes and itching, lymphopenia and an increased chance of
PML.
Cladribine.
An orally administered purine nucleotide analog. It is cytotoxic to
lymphocytes. Side effects are Hairy cell leukemia, reactivation of
tuberculosis, and teratogenic to developing fetus.
Many
other S1P agents are in various stages of development and approval
from FDA.
Besides
the specific treatment of the primary cause of MS, several associated
disabilities and complications have to be managed properly and
adequately. These are not discussed here.
Recent animal experiments have shown that damaged axion of nerves can be repaired by Metalloprotease 4, an analog of human Metalloprotease 17, by stabilizing Fusogen EFF-1 at the damaged site and then beginning repairs.
Recent animal experiments have shown that damaged axion of nerves can be repaired by Metalloprotease 4, an analog of human Metalloprotease 17, by stabilizing Fusogen EFF-1 at the damaged site and then beginning repairs.
High-efficacy therapies included rituximab, ocrelizumab, alemtuzumab, mitoxantrone, and natalizumab.
The window of therapeutic opportunity refers to the first 5 years of the disease when inflammation is highest.
The benefits of early high-efficacy treatment seemed to continue past the time when all patients were on high-efficacy treatment.
The benefits of early high-efficacy treatment seemed to continue past the time when all patients were on high-efficacy treatment.
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