| Literature DB >> 21756314 |
Anne Waschbisch1, Arndt Manzel, Ralf A Linker, De-Hyung Lee.
Abstract
The investigation of central nervous system vascular changes in the pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis (MS) is a time-honored concept. Yet, recent reports on changes in venous cerebrospinal outflow, the advent of new magnetic resonance imaging techniques and the investigation of immunomodulatory properties of several vascular mediators on the molecular level have added new excitement to hypotheses centering around vascular pathology as determining factor in the pathophysiology of MS. Here we critically review the concept of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency in MS patients and describe new imaging techniques including perfusion weighted imaging, susceptibility weighted imaging and diffusion weighted imaging which reveal central nervous system hypoperfusion, perivascular iron deposition and diffuse structural changes in the MS brain. On a molecular basis, vascular mediators represent interesting targets connecting vascular pathology with immunomodulation. In summary, the relation of venous changes to the pathophysiology of MS may not be as simple as initially described and it certainly seems awkward to think of the complex disease MS solely as result of a simple venous outflow obstruction. Yet, the investigation of new vascular concepts as one variable in the pathophysiology of the autoimmune attack seems very worthwhile and may add to a better understanding of this devastating disorder.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21756314 PMCID: PMC3156723 DOI: 10.1186/2040-7378-3-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Transl Stroke Med ISSN: 2040-7378
Comparison of CCSVI studies
| method of detection | no. of patients | no. of control subjects | main findings | CCSVI in MS | author | year | ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TCCS | 89 MS | 60 | alterations of intracranial venous haemodynamics in MS patients | + | Zamboni et al. | 2007 | [ |
| TCCS-ECD | 65 MS | 235 | high association of venous outflow anomalies with MS (OR43). Selective venography: multiple extracranial venous stenoses in all MS but none of the control subjects | + | Zamboni et al. | 2009 | [ |
| TCCS-ECD | 109 MS | 177 | presence of CCSVI (≥ 2 criteria) in all MS patients but none of the controls | + | Zamboni et al. | 2009 | [ |
| ECD | 70 MS | n/a | extracranial signs of abnormal venous outflow in 91,4% of MS patients | + | Simka et al. | 2010 | [ |
| ECD | 25 MS | 25 | extracranial signs of CCSVI (≥ 2 criteria) in 84% of MS patients but none of the controls | + | Al-Omari and Rousan | 2010 | [ |
| TCCS-ECD | 56 MS | 20 | absence of CCSVI (≥ 2 criteria) in all MS and control subjects | - | Doepp et al. | 2010 | [ |
| TCCS-ECD | 20 MS | 20 | absence of CCSVI (≥ 2 criteria) in all MS and 95% of controls | - | Mayer et al. | 2011 | [ |
| TCCS-ECD | 289 MS | 189 | Higher prevalence of CCSVI (≥ 2 criteria) in MS (56,1%) compared to healthy controls but low sensitivity/specificity | +/- | Zivadinov et al. | 2011 | [ |
| TCCS-ECD | 50 CIS | 170 | Ultrasound criteria for CCSVI in 8 CIS patients, no venous anomalies detected by venography. | - | Baracchini et al. | 2011 | [ |
| selective venography | 31 MS | n/a | extracranial venous outflow anomalities infrequent in early MS, more prevalent in late MS | +/- | Yamout et al. | 2010 | [ |
| selective venography | 342 MS | n/a | venous stenoses detected in 97% of patients previously diagnosed with CCSVI by ultrasound | + | Ludyga et al. | 2010 | [ |
Recent studies addressing the presence of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) by high resolution echocolor Doppler (ECD), transcranial color Doppler sonography (TCCS) and/or selective venography.
Figure 1Scheme depicting the possible interplay between vascular mediators and changes in microcirculation during autoimmune inflammation of the CNS. Altered microcirculation may lead to iron deposition and increased leukocyte infiltration. In turn, pleiotropic factors such as vascular mediators released by immune cells and the activated endothelium can cause neovascularization and lead to the recruitment of further effector cells. This mechanism may be part of a feed-forward loop that perpetuates the inflammatory process in MS.