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Living with Multiple Sclerosis
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Diagnosing Multiple Sclerosis

There is no one test that can diagnose multiple sclerosis. The following is a brief description of the tests your family doctor and the neurologist may perform if you are suspected of having multiple sclerosis.

» Medical History

Your doctor may ask you about current symptoms as well as for a detailed medical history, which will include any previous symptoms experienced.

» Neurological Exam

Your doctor may do an examination which looks for signs of neurological impairment, or that your functions have been disrupted. These include changes in reflexes, eye movements, coordination, and gait (such as difficulty in walking).

» Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

MRI is the preferred way to help establish a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. The MRI scanner uses magnetic and radio waves to produce detailed images of your brain and spinal cord. In MS, these images will show damage to the myelin or nerve fibres in the brain and spinal cord. These areas of damage are referred to as lesions, scars (sclerosis), or plaques.

MRI can tell the difference between old lesions and those that are new or active. The MRI scan is not painful or invasive. It requires that a person lie very still on a narrow table within the tunnel of the scanner. The tunnel is well lit and well ventilated, and you can speak to the MRI technologist during the scan. Throughout the scan you will hear loud clunking noises – the noises are part of the magnetic / radio waves. These waves affect the hydrogen (water) atoms in the brain and spinal cord, and allow the doctor to see how MS may have damaged the myelin, which is a fatty substance covering the brain and spinal cord.

Usually you can have the option of listening to a CD of your choice during this time, or even watching a DVD. If you are uncomfortable with being in small, enclosed spaces, be sure to let the person doing the MRI know, so that they can help you through it as much as possible.

» Testing of visual, auditory and somatosensory evoked potentials

These tests measure the speed at which messages in the brain pass along the nerves. This can indicate if there is anything wrong in the way the brain and spinal cord (central nervous system) are working. In order to measure evoked potentials, wires are placed on the scalp. The tests are not painful or invasive.

» Lumbar Puncture (or Spinal Tap)

This test can help determine if there are any signs of certain antibodies and proteins in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The cerebrospinal fluid is the liquid which surrounds the brain and spinal cord. The presence of certain antibodies and proteins suggest an abnormal immune response, which could mean that your immune system is attacking the myelin covering of the nerves in the brain and spinal cord.

The test can be inconclusive. While an individual with MS will likely have these proteins in their cerebrospinal fluid, having these proteins does not necessarily mean that you have multiple sclerosis.

This test is invasive as it involves inserting a needle into the back. A local anesthesia is given so although the test is uncomfortable it is not generally painful. It also requires the individual to lay flat for several hours following the procedure, and to drink fluids immediately after the spinal tap to guard against dehydration (and a resulting headache).


Arriving at a diagnosis

The diagnosis of clinically definite multiple sclerosis requires that there be signs of two neurological events (also known as MS attacks or relapses). These attacks suggest that the individual is experiencing loss of myelin in the brain and spinal cord. The two attacks must occur in different areas of the brain and spinal cord and occur at two separate times. An example of this may be vision problems followed six months later by numbness or tingling on one side of the body.

Studies have shown that people who have had a single sign or symptom that suggests loss of myelin and who also have MRI-detected brain lesions are at a higher risk of developing multiple sclerosis within several years. People who may have experienced a single attack but have no evidence of MRI-detected brain lesions are at relatively lower risk for developing multiple sclerosis over the same time period.

To read more about this study, please click here.

 

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