Pathological mechanisms in progressive multiple sclerosis

DH Mahad, BD Trapp, H Lassmann - The Lancet Neurology, 2015 - thelancet.com
DH Mahad, BD Trapp, H Lassmann
The Lancet Neurology, 2015thelancet.com
A better understanding of the pathological mechanisms that drive neurodegeneration in
individuals with multiple sclerosis is needed to develop therapies that will effectively treat
patients in the primary and secondary progressive stages of the disease. We propose that
the inflammatory demyelinating disease process in early multiple sclerosis triggers a
cascade of events that lead to neurodegeneration and are amplified by pathogenic
mechanisms related to brain ageing and accumulated disease burden. Key elements driving …
Summary
A better understanding of the pathological mechanisms that drive neurodegeneration in individuals with multiple sclerosis is needed to develop therapies that will effectively treat patients in the primary and secondary progressive stages of the disease. We propose that the inflammatory demyelinating disease process in early multiple sclerosis triggers a cascade of events that lead to neurodegeneration and are amplified by pathogenic mechanisms related to brain ageing and accumulated disease burden. Key elements driving neurodegeneration include microglia activation, chronic oxidative injury, accumulation of mitochondrial damage in axons, and age-related iron accumulation in the human brain. Altered mitochondrial function in axons might be of particular importance. This process leads to chronic cell stress and imbalance of ionic homoeostasis, resulting in axonal and neuronal death. The evidence suggests that treatment of progressive multiple sclerosis should be based on a combination of anti-inflammatory, regenerative, and neuroprotective strategies.
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