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Multiple Sclerosis
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research-article

Magnetic resonance evidence of cortical onset of multiple sclerosis

M Calabrese

Department of Neurosciences, The Multiple Sclerosis Centre of Veneto Region – First Neurology Clinic, University Hospital of Padua, Padua, Italy calabresem{at}hotmail.it

P Gallo

Department of Neurosciences, The Multiple Sclerosis Centre of Veneto Region – First Neurology Clinic, University Hospital of Padua, Padua, Italy

Background

Despite clinical symptoms and signs of central nervous system dysfunction, conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain and spinal cord may appear normal in multiple sclerosis (MS) at clinical onset.

Objective

To demonstrate cortical pathology, namely the presence of cortical lesions (CLs) in patients with symptoms/signs suggestive of MS but having normal appearing white matter (WM) on MRI.

Methods

CLs were disclosed by double inversion recovery (DIR) MRI sequence. The final diagnosis of MS was achieved by the demonstration of the dissemination in space and time of WM lesions, and the absence of a better explanation of symptoms/signs, according to the established international diagnostic criteria.

Results

We describe four patients with MS, in which CLs were observed by DIR months/years before the MRI evidence of inflammatory lesions in the WM.

Interpretation

We suggest that, at least in some patients with MS, the pathological process underlying MS starts in the cortex. DIR sequence should be included in the MRI examination of suspected patients with MS with normal conventional MRI sequences at clinical onset. CLs should be evaluated for their inclusion in the MRI diagnostic criteria for MS.

Key Words: atrophy • multiple sclerosis • MRI

Multiple Sclerosis, Vol. 15, No. 8, 933-941 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1352458509106510


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