Early Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis: Difficult But Important
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How does one make a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis early in its course when
treatment can best prevent damage to the brain and spinal cord? The succinct
answer is: "With difficulty."
The principal dilemma in current management of multiple sclerosis is that while
early diagnosis enables damage-sparing treatment to begin, diagnosing MS too
early increases the likelihood of treating people who don't actually have the
disease. Current disease-modifying drugs are all given by injection and cost
about $14,000 per year. Apart from being inconvenient and expensive, there is
some risk of harm from them which, if the patient doesn't actually have MS,
occurs without any offsetting benefit.
The dilemma would not be great if multiple sclerosis was easy to diagnose, but
unfortunately MS is among the most difficult diagnoses in all of medicine to
make, at least while still in its early stages. Early in the course of symptoms,
MS can resemble other conditions; moreover, other conditions can resemble MS.
Affecting 2.5 million people worldwide and 350,000 people in the U.S. alone,
multiple sclerosis is not exactly a rare disease. It affects women at least
twice as often as men and begins early in adulthood with most cases starting
between the ages of 20 and 40.
MS is a so-called autoimmune disease, meaning that a person's immune
system--ordinarily useful and essential in fighting off infections--becomes
overactive and attacks the individual's own bodily tissues. Rheumatoid arthritis
is another example of an autoimmune disease, but in MS the immune attack is not
directed against joints as it is in rheumatoid arthritis. Instead, the immune
system attacks large clusters of nerve-fibers generally deep within the central
nervous system which includes the brain and spinal cord.
These attacks can produce a wide variety of symptoms depending on what the usual
function was of the nerve-fibers that are under attack. When the attacked
nerve-fibers have to do with vision, the symptoms are visual, like loss of
visual clarity or even doubling of vision. When the nerve-fibers are involved
with the process of bodily sensation, then the symptoms can be numbness or
tingling. In fact, visual or sensory symptoms are the most common initial
symptoms in multiple sclerosis. But initial symptoms might instead consist of
dizziness, weakness, clumsiness or difficulty with urination. The sheer
diversity of early symptoms that can be due to multiple sclerosis is one of the
chief difficulties in recognizing it for what it is and properly diagnosing it.
It's useful in this regard to consider the twin issues of "false-positives" and
"false-negatives." In short, every medical test and every diagnosis is subject
to these errors. False-positive means that a test or a doctor indicates that a
disease is present when it is, in fact, absent. A false-negative error occurs
when a test or a doctor indicates that a disease is absent when it is, in fact,
present. Despite the increased confidence that expanding medical knowledge and
ever-more sophisticated tests provide, false-positives and false-negatives are a
fact of life and still apply to every test and every diagnosis.
In multiple sclerosis there are three cornerstones to the diagnostic process. In
usual descending order of importance they are the clinical evaluation, magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) scanning and examination of the cerebrospinal fluid.
Each of these is important in its own way, but one component almost never stands
on its own merits, requiring one or both of the other components for
corroboration.
The clinical evaluation refers to the time-honored process in which the
physician elicits the history of the symptoms and performs a physical
examination. The physical examination consists mainly of the neurological
examination, which is a battery of mini-tests that inventories the performance
of different components of the nervous system.
Even a test as high-tech and powerful as the MRI scan can lead to diagnostic
errors. False-positives often occur when a patient has a scan for a totally
unrelated reason--like headaches, for example--and has pockets of increased
signal within the brain for which the radiologist raises the possibility of
multiple sclerosis. When the abnormal scan leads to consultation with a
neurologist, the neurologist often determines that multiple sclerosis is out of
the question, and the areas of increased signal are either benign or due to
another problem entirely. MRIs less frequently produce false-negatives for
multiple sclerosis, but even so, this imaging test is believed to show just the
tip of the iceberg in this disease, failing to demonstrate important changes
that occur at the microscopic level.
Examining the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is another valuable tool in diagnosing
MS. The CSF bathes the inside and the outside of the brain and the outside of
the spinal cord, so its cellular and chemical composition often reflects what's
going on within those structures. CSF is obtained by means of lumbar puncture,
also known as spinal tap, a safe procedure in which a needle is inserted through
the lower back and into the CSF space. The fluid is collected as it drips out
the back of the needle. In cases of active MS there are usually abnormal
proteins produced by the immune system that can be detected and measured in the
CSF. However, here too there are false-positives and false-negatives, so that
some people with abnormal proteins don't have MS and other people with normal
proteins still do have the disease.
So the diagnostic process--including clinical evaluation, MRI scanning and CSF
examination--is fraught with the possibility of error at each step of the way.
Yet there is considerable incentive to make the diagnosis as early in the
disease as possible (which is also when the risk of diagnostic errors is
greatest) in order to initiate treatment that tames the out-of-control immune
system. Sifting through the diagnostic information to make a timely and accurate
diagnosis almost always requires the assistance of a neurologist, and even with
the help of these specialists in disorders of the nervous system, sometimes the
diagnosis gets revised as time passes and clues become more definite.
(C) 2005 by Gary Cordingley
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