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View DoctorsMultiple sclerosis (MS) is a condition that affects the brain and spinal cord. The body’s immune system attacks the protective covering of nerve fibers, which then affects the way the electrical messages flow within the brain, and from the brain to the rest of your body. It causes damage to the nerves, which causes scarring. Learn more about how MS affects the body here.
In people with multiple sclerosis (MS), areas of inflammation caused by white blood cells appear as white spots on the brain and spinal cord. If the spots are in areas that perform a very obvious function, then even the slightest damage will cause noticeable symptoms. For example, if the nerves to the eye become even slightly inflamed, a reduction in vision will be noticed. Similarly, if inflammation in the spinal cord occurs in the nerves that carry pain, it will immediately be felt. However, if the inflammation is in the areas that process memory or judgment, or in the fibers that link-up to such important areas, it may go totally unnoticed.
Inflammation and demyelination usually develop over hours or days (it does not occur abruptly like a stroke). It usually then persists for several days or weeks, and then subsides and recovers. The recovery happens because the immune system decides to stop attacking the nerves. The nervous system then starts repairing itself, known as ‘remyelination’, and function may return to normal.
An episode of new inflammation is called a ‘relapse’ or ‘attack’. Symptoms of a relapse depend on the area that is inflamed and there can be many. They vary from person to person and are hard to predict. They may come and go and can affect different people at different times. Some symptoms are responsive to treatment while others are more difficult to manage. As MS affects the nerves of the brain and spinal cord, it can affect almost any part of the body and its functions.
Whilst most people won’t experience all the common symptoms of MS, it is important to recognize the signs to ensure an accurate diagnosis as soon as possible, and to rule out other possible medical complications.
Less common symptoms of MS
Since MS affects any part of the brain or spinal cord, lots of other symptoms are possible, but are usually less common. These include trigeminal neuralgia (an electric shock-like pain in the face), seizures, and problems with speech, swallowing, breathing, and hearing.
We still don’t know for certain what causes MS. Experts believe that there may be a combination of factors that make MS more likely to develop, rather than a single cause. These risk factors are things that we are all exposed to every day, but only a small number of people will go on to develop MS. Doctors aren’t able to predict who will and won’t get the disease.
Immunologic factors
It is widely believed that MS is an autoimmune disease. This means that our body’s own immune system, which is responsible for fighting infection, starts to attack healthy cells in a faulty immune response. When someone has MS, the immune system targets something called ‘myelin’, a fatty protein that covers the nerves in our brain and spinal cord. This is called demyelination. When this happens, our nerves can’t conduct electrical impulses properly. The messages from the brain can’t travel along the nerves smoothly, causing a delay or complete interruption.
In the early stages of MS, the body can repair this damage to some degree, and replace the myelin so messages can still travel along the nerves. This is called remyelination. The brain can also reroute messages. Over time though, the loss of myelin leaves nerves exposed and more at-risk of permanent damage.
Genetic factors
MS is not an inherited condition, which means that it is not hereditary or passed on from other family members. However, some people may have specific genes that make them more likely to develop the disease, so there is a genetic risk that it might be inherited. For example, in identical twins, if one has MS, then there is a much higher chance that the other will develop it too. While several members of the same family may have MS, having the specific genes does not increase risk of other family members having the condition and other risk factors are needed to trigger the onset.
Infection
Research has shown that while an infection does not cause MS, it can act as a trigger, which sets off a number of events within the body which may develop into MS over a long period of time. We still don’t know which viruses can cause this trigger, or the exact chain of events that lead to MS, but scientists are exploring the link with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), measles, and human herpes virus-6.
Environmental factors
Studies have revealed that there may be several environmental factors that increase the chance of MS developing. These include:
While doctors can’t predict who will get MS, they have found that there are certain patterns in the distribution of the disease that might help us understand what causes it. This is called epidemiology. Factors affecting epidemiology include:
The number of people being diagnosed with MS is increasing and experts aren’t sure why. While it may be down to increased awareness of the disease and more sophisticated diagnostic techniques, there may be other factors involved that are not yet clear.
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