A mixtape for multiple sclerosis

A mixtape for multiple sclerosis

Friday 1 May 2020

Fire

In order to cheer myself up in the middle of this pandemic, I thought I'd do a wee bit of scrolling through Twitter to find some cat memes.

What I actually stumbled upon, due partly to the organisations and people I follow, was a discussion about something called 'smouldering MS.'

Now to me, smouldering conjures up images of heavy-lidded Hollywood goddess Lauren Bacall. It does not, for example, suggest chronic active MS lesions.

Or so I thought. But my Twitter foray lead me to an article about smouldering MS and my word it's a cheering read.

According to the piece on the MS Trust website, a team of researchers have developed a new MRI technique which makes it possible to capture a type of lesion with a dark rim, which grow slowly for many years.

These lesions can appear regardless of the type of MS or - crucially - whether people were, or had ever, taken a DMT. 

The study showed that "people who had four or more smouldering lesions were more likely to have developed cognitive and mobility problems at an earlier age, have lower brain volume and were more likely to have MS that had become progressive, when compared to people with no smouldering lesions."

Plus, "in a subset of people who had yearly MRI scans for 10 years or longer, rimless lesions shrank over time, but chronic active lesions remained the same size or expanded. Smouldering lesions showed MRI features typical of on-going tissue destruction."

The cheerful conclusion to the research indicates that smouldering lesions are common in MS, are associated with a more aggressive course of MS, cause tissue dame, and (this really is the kicker) occur even in people taking effective DMTs.

So, thanks Twitter, that's cheered me up no end. And also given me some questions for my neurologist whenever it is I can next see him.

Sigh.



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