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26 result(s) for "Buttmann, M"
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Central motor conduction time may predict response to fampridine in patients with multiple sclerosis
[...]a repeated measurements approach, as used for the pivotal trials, might have revealed even stronger correlations. [...]our study suggests that patients with MS with a normal pretherapy CMCT are very unlikely to benefit from fampridine, whereas patients with a prolonged CMCT have a higher chance to respond to treatment than non-stratified patients.
Identification of the flotillin-1/2 heterocomplex as a target of autoantibodies in bona fide multiple sclerosis
Background Autoantibodies, in particular those against aquaporin-4 and myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG), aid as biomarkers in the differential diagnosis of demyelination. Here, we report on discovery of autoantibodies against flotillin in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). Methods The target antigen was identified by histo-immunoprecipitation using the patients’ sera and cryosections of rat or pig cerebellum combined with mass spectrometrical analysis. Correct identification was ascertained by indirect immunofluorescence and neutralization tests using the target antigens recombinantly expressed in HEK293 cells. Results Serum and CSF of the index patient produced a fine-granular IgG indirect immunofluorescence staining of the hippocampal and cerebellar molecular layers. Flotillin-1 and flotillin-2 were identified as target autoantigens. They also reacted with recombinant human flotillin-1/2 co-expressed in HEK293 cells, but not with the individual flotillins in fixed- and live-cell assays. Moreover, neutralization using flotillin-1/2, but not the single flotillins, abolished the tissue reactivity of patient serum. Screening of 521 patients, for whom anti-aquaporin-4 testing was requested and negative, revealed 8 additional patients with anti-flotillin-1/2 autoantibodies. All eight were negative for anti-MOG. Six patients ex post fulfilled the revised McDonald criteria for MS. Vice versa, screening of 538 MS sera revealed anti-flotillin-1/2 autoantibodies in eight patients. The autoantibodies were not found in a cohort of 67 patients with other neural autoantibody-associated syndromes and in 444 healthy blood donors. Conclusions Autoantibodies against the flotillin-1/2 heterocomplex, a peripheral membrane protein that is involved in axon outgrowth and regeneration of the optic nerve, are present in 1–2% of patients with bona fide MS.
Quadrivalente HPV-Impfung erhöht nicht das MS-Risiko
Eine Kohortenstudie hat keine Assoziation zwischen der quadrivalenten HPV-Vakzinierung und dem Auftreten demyelinisierender Erkrankungen des zentralen Nervensystems gefunden.
Investigation of sex-specific effects of apolipoprotein E on severity of EAE and MS
Background Despite pleiotropic immunomodulatory effects of apolipoprotein E (apoE) in vitro , its effects on the clinical course of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and multiple sclerosis (MS) are still controversial. As sex hormones modify immunomodulatory apoE functions, they may explain contentious findings. This study aimed to investigate sex-specific effects of apoE on disease course of EAE and MS. Methods MOG 35-55 induced EAE in female and male apoE -deficient mice was assessed clinically and histopathologically. apoE expression was investigated by qPCR. The association of the MS severity score (MSSS) and APOE rs429358 and rs7412 was assessed across 3237 MS patients using linear regression analyses. Results EAE disease course was slightly attenuated in male apoE -deficient ( apoE −/− ) mice compared to wildtype mice (cumulative median score: apoE −/−  = 2 [IQR 0.0–4.5]; wildtype = 4 [IQR 1.0–5.0]; n  = 10 each group, p  = 0.0002). In contrast, EAE was more severe in female apoE −/− mice compared to wildtype mice (cumulative median score: apoE −/−  = 3 [IQR 2.0–4.5]; wildtype = 3 [IQR 0.0–4.0]; n  = 10, p  = 0.003). In wildtype animals, apoE expression during the chronic EAE phase was increased in both females and males (in comparison to naïve animals; p  < 0.001). However, in MS, we did not observe a significant association between MSSS and rs429358 or rs7412, neither in the overall analyses nor upon stratification for sex. Conclusions apoE exerts moderate sex-specific effects on EAE severity. However, the results in the apoE knock-out model are not comparable to effects of polymorphic variants in the human APOE gene, thus pinpointing the challenge of translating findings from the EAE model to the human disease.
Phenotyping of the thoracic-onset variant of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
Thoracic-onset amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (T-ALS) is a rare subform, affecting only 3% of all patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).1 In order to facilitate a better understanding of this variant, we aimed at characterising typical features of T-ALS including clinical presentation, propagation patterns and prognosis.
Local pain during REBIF injection is not due to acidic pH
In our clinical experience, local pain at the injection site is a common adverse event for persons with MS receiving subcutaneous REBIF (interferon-[beta]1a) injections. The placebo, as provided by our local pharmacy, was of similar composition to the commercial REBIF preparation apart from IFN-[beta]1a and consisted, as did the placebo used in the clinical REBIF trials, of 8.0 mg/ml human serum albumin and 54.6 mg/ml mannitol, osmolality 362 mOsm/kg, pH 3.8 (adjusted with acetic acid).
Investigation of the KIR4.1 potassium channel as a putative antigen in patients with multiple sclerosis: a comparative study
Antibodies have been implicated in the pathogenicity of multiple sclerosis by findings of immunoglobulins in patients' CSF and often IgG and complement in lesions, and by a 2012 report that nearly half of patients' serum samples contain IgG specific for a glial potassium-channel, KIR4.1. We aimed to establish the frequency of KIR4.1-binding IgG in serum and CSF of patients with multiple sclerosis, and whether KIR4.1 immunoreactivity is retained or lost in demyelinating lesions. Using ELISA with a KIR4.1 peptide, we tested archival serum from 229 population-based and 57 clinic-based patients with multiple sclerosis, 99 healthy controls, and 109 disease controls, and CSF from 25 patients with multiple sclerosis and 22 disease controls. We tested all CSF and serum samples from 50 of the clinic-based patients with multiple sclerosis on cells expressing functional KIR4.1, using cell-based immunofluorescence and immunoprecipitation (solubilised recombinant human KIR4.1). We assessed KIR4.1 immunoreactivity in archival brain samples from 15 patients with histopathologically confirmed multiple sclerosis (22 plaques [eight early active, eight inactive, and six remyelinated], 13 periplaque regions and eight normal-appearing white-matter and grey-matter regions) and from three controls with non-neurological diseases. Three of 286 serum samples from patients with multiple sclerosis and two of 208 serum samples from controls showed KIR4.1 reactivity on ELISA; none of the CSF samples from patients or controls showed KIR4.1 reactivity. IgG in none of the 50 serum samples from clinic-based patients immunoprecipitated KIR4.1, but a commercial KIR4.1-specific control IgG did. By immunofluorescence, one of 50 serum samples from patients with multiple sclerosis yielded faint plasmalemmal staining on both KIR4.1-expressing and non-expressing cells; 16 bound faintly to intracellular components. In all cases, IgG binding was quenched by absorption with liver powder or lysates from non-transfected cells. Binding by the KIR4.1-specific control IgG was quenched only by lysates containing KIR4.1. IgG in none of the 25 CSF samples from patients with multiple sclerosis bound to KIR4.1-transfected cells. Glial KIR4.1 immunoreactivity was increased relative to expression in healthy control brain in all active demyelinating lesions, remyelinated lesions, and periplaque white matter regions. We did not detect KIR4.1-specific IgG in serum or CSF from patients with multiple sclerosis or KIR4.1 loss from glia in multiple sclerosis lesions. Serological testing for KIR4.1-specific IgG is unlikely to aid diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. The target antigen of multiple sclerosis remains elusive. The National Institutes of Health, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and the Mayo Clinic Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging.
Multiple Sklerose: Den Verlauf und die Symptomatik verbesserner
Die Therapie der Multiplen Sklerose entwickelt sich dynamisch. Im letzten Jahr wurden neue Medikamente zur verlaufsmodifizierenden und zur symptomatischen Behandlung zugelassen. Unsere Autoren informieren Sie, wie Hausarzt und Neurologe diese Substanzen in enger Zusammenarbeit sicher und wirksam einsetzen können.