CAUSES OF MS
These are the major scientific theories about the causes of MS:
Immunological
It is now generally accepted that MS involves an autoimmune processan
abnormal immune response directed against the central nervous system (CNS). The
exact antigenthe target the immune cells are sensitized to
attackremains unknown.
In recent years, however, researchers have been able to identify which
immune cells are mounting the attack, how they are activated to attack, and
some of the sites, or receptors, on the attacking cells that appear to be
attracted to the myelin to begin the destructive process.
The destruction of myelinthe fatty sheath that surrounds and insulates
the nerve fiberscauses the nerve impulses to be slowed or halted and
produces the symptoms of MS. Researchers are looking for highly specific immune
modulating therapies to stop this abnormal immune response without harming
normal immune cells.
Environmental
Migration patterns and epidemiologic studiesthose that take into
account variations in geography, socioeconomics, genetics, and other
factorshave shown that people who are born in an area of the world with a
high risk of MS and move to an area with a lower risk, acquire the risk of
their new home, if the move occurs before the age of 15 years. Such data
suggest that exposure to some environmental agent that occurs before puberty
may predispose a person to develop MS later on.
Viral
Since initial exposure to numerous viruses occurs during childhood, and
since viruses are well recognized as causes of demyelination and inflammation,
it is possible that a virus is the triggering factor in MS. More than a dozen
viruses including measles, canine distemper, and herpes (HHV-6) have been
investigated to determine if they are involved in the development of MS, but it
has not yet been definitively proven that any one virus triggers MS.
Genetic
While MS is not hereditary, having a first-degree relative such as a parent
or sibling with MS increases an individual's risk of developing the disease
several-fold above the risk for the general population. There are studies that
show there is a higher prevalence of certain genes in populations with high
rates of MS.
Common genetic factors have also been found in some families where there is
more than one person with MS. Some neurologists theorize that MS develops
because a person is born with a genetic predisposition to react to some
environmental agent, which, upon exposure, triggers an autoimmune response.
Sophisticated new techniques for identifying genes may help answer questions
about the role of genetics in the development of MS.
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