| Literature DB >> 21119885 |
Alberto Spalice1, Pasquale Parisi, Laura Papetti, Francesco Nicita, Fabiana Ursitti, Francesca Del Balzo, Enrico Properzi, Alberto Verrotti, Martino Ruggieri, Paola Iannetti.
Abstract
Inflammatory demyelinating diseases comprise a spectrum of disorders affecting the myelin of the central and peripheral nervous system. These diseases can usually be differentiated on the basis of clinical, radiological, laboratory and pathological findings. Recent studies have contributed to current awareness that inflammatory demyelinating diseases are not restricted to the adult age group, but are more common in pediatric age than previously believed. Some of pediatric inflammatory demyelinating diseases carry an unfavorable long-term prognosis but appropriate treatments can improve the outcome. The possibility of physical and cognitive disability resulting from these diseases, highlights the urgent need for therapeutic strategies for neurorehabilitation, neuroregeneration, and neurorepair. This review discusses characteristics of primary demyelinating diseases more frequently observed in childhood, focusing on epidemiology, clinical aspects and treatments.Entities:
Keywords: ADEM; Demyelinating disease; disease-modifying therapies; immune-mediate polyradiculoneuropathies; immunomodulatory therapy.; pediatric multiple sclerosis
Year: 2010 PMID: 21119885 PMCID: PMC2923368 DOI: 10.2174/157015910791233141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neuropharmacol ISSN: 1570-159X Impact factor: 7.363
Classification of the Idiopathic Inflammatory Demyelinating Disease of CNS
| Idiopathic Inflammatory Demyelinating Disease of CNS |
|---|
| Acute hemorrhagic leukoencephalitis |
| Optic neuritis |
| Spinal Cord lesions: |
acute necrotizing myelitis transverse myelitis |
| Pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis |
| Multiple sclerosis |
| Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis |
| Neuromyelitis optica or Devic’s syndrome |
| Baló’s concentric sclerosis |
| Schilder’s disease |
Classification of the Idiopathic Inflammatory Neuropathies
| Idiopathic Inflammatory Neuropathy |
|---|
| Acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (AIDP) |
| Acute motor axonal neuropathy (AMAN) |
| Acute motor-sensory axonal neuropathy (AMSAN) |
| Fisher Syndrome and other regional variants |
| Pharyngeal-cervical-brachial |
| Paraparetic |
| Facial palsies |
| Pure oculomotor |
| Pure dysautonomia |
| Pure sensory Guillain-Barre´ syndrome |
| Ataxic Guillain-Barre´ syndrome |
| Subacute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy |
| Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy |
| Multifocal motor neuropathy with conduction block |
| Chronic relapsing axonal neuropathy |
| Chronic ataxic sensory neuronopathy |
Clinical, CSF and MRI Differences Between MS, ADEM, Schilder’s Disease and Devic’s Syndrome
| MS | ADEM | Schilder’s Disease | Devic’s Syndrome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| > 10 years | < 10 years | 5-14 years | 20-40 years | |
| M> F | M= F | M= F | F> M | |
| variable | very frequent | _ | frequent | |
| rare | required | _ | _ | |
| RR, SP, PP, PR | relapsing/monophasic/ multiphasic | monophasic-not remitting/ remitting/ progressive | monophasic/ relapsing | |
| optic nerve cerebellum brainstem central white matter | subcortical brainstem thalamus | centrum semiovale parieto-occipital white matter | optic nerve/spinal cord | |
| slight to moderate | moderate | severe | severe | |
| small lesions | large, symmetric lesions | large lesions | non specific | |
| < 1 segment, | _ | _ | > 3 segment, | |
| marginal | central | |||
| < 50 lymphocytes | > 50 lymphocytes | normal | > 50 PMN | |
| positive | variable | negative | negative | |
| < 10% | _ | _ | > 70% |