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Large multiple sclerosis brain cohort reveals biological differences linked to disease severity
Why does multiple sclerosis progress quickly in some people, while others remain stable for years? Researchers from the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience have identified biological patterns in ...
A gene variant tied to more severe MS disability may also correlate with poor cognitive performance in healthy adults, per a ...
An international research team, including researchers at Karolinska Institutet, has mapped the genes expressed in the brain cells of people with multiple sclerosis (MS). The atlas, which is presented ...
Changes in the upper spinal cord, measured on routine brain MRI, may help flag higher MS progression risk in people with RRMS ...
Multiple sclerosis, a complex neurological condition affecting nearly 3 million people worldwide, has long been characterized by its elusiveness. Even as medical imaging technology has advanced ...
Researcher Daan van der Vliet, together with colleagues from the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Leiden University, and Utrecht University, has discovered an important mechanism that may be ...
Scientists have uncovered a surprising clue that may help explain why multiple sclerosis (MS) progresses rapidly in some people but not others. In brain tissue from patients with severe MS, ...
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- Multiple sclerosis (MS) affects an estimated 2.3 million people worldwide. Approximately 80% of people with MS have inflammation in the cerebellum, the part of the brain that ...
Changes in NAWM and NAGM are crucial in MS progression, challenging the traditional lesion-centric model. Subtle alterations in myelin integrity, immune cell function, and neuronal connectivity ...
MedPage Today on MSN
Brain worm lesions mimicking cancer; midlife dementia marker; ovarian reserve and MS
News and commentary from the world of neurology and neuroscience ...
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