CLINICAL ASPECTS OF MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS IN NORTH-EAST SCOTLAND WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO ITS COURSE AND PROGNOSIS

被引:116
作者
PHADKE, JG [1 ]
机构
[1] ABERDEEN ROYAL INFIRM, DEPT NEUROL, ABERDEEN AB9 2ZB, SCOTLAND
关键词
D O I
10.1093/brain/113.6.1597
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The prognosis and course of multiple sclerosis (MS) and the factors that affect them were assessed in a group of 1055 patients, representing an unselected (epidemiological) sample observed in the north-east (Grampian region) of Scotland for a period ranging between 1 and 60 years. In 7% the disease began before the age of 20 yrs, in 12% after the age of 50 yrs, and in the remainder onset was between the ages of 20 and 50 years. The male/female ratio was 1:1.8. Mean disease duration in those observed until death (216 patients) was 24.5 yrs, with no significant difference between the sexes. Prognosis was assessed either by the interval between onset and death or by the degree of disability over a defined priod of time. Depending on the length of follow-up, just over one-quarter (26%) to over one-third (36.3%) had a benign course and between 8.0 and 17.7% had a poor prognosis. Nearly a third had a remittent (32.8%) or relapsing cumulative (34%) course and 9% had a progressive course from the start. Several factors were noted to affect the prognosis. Prognosis was significantly better, independent of sex, in those with (1) an early onset (< 40 yrs of age); (2) retrobulbar neuritis or a brainstem lesion or sensory symptoms alone at onset; (3) short duration of initial symptoms (< 6 months)); (4) a long onset - first relapse interval (> 1 yr); (5) a remittent course in the beginning and (6) lack of a family history of MS. The factors which predicted a poor prognosis included: (1) a late onset (> 40 yrs of age); (2) progressive course from the start; (3) multiple sites of lesions initially, or a cerebellar or spinal cord lesion at the onset; (4) psychiatric or persistent urinary symptoms at the onset or within 10 yrs; (5) persistent intitial symptoms (beyond 1 yr); (6) early first relapse (within 6 months); (7) a family history of MS; (8) social class status IV and V; and (9) bilaterally prolonged visual evoked potential (VEP) P100 latency. Address in childhod and at the onset of the disease, changes in the CSF and CT brain scan were not of predictive value.
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页码:1597 / 1628
页数:32
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