Guest guest Posted April 12, 2005 Report Share Posted April 12, 2005 This new work on MS (and its correspondance) is dense and jargonous, so I may not get down to real brass tacks with it for a long time. Barnett and Prineas made a discovery that could shake MS studies to the foundations, and could also cast some much-needed light on cellular details of a (the?) spirochete-vs-host confrontation, if indeed MS is caused by a spirochetal infection not substantially complicated by wild cards like autoimmunity or hyperreactivity, but instead rather straightforward - which seems to be a little bit more than just a strong possibility. Altho, *all* the spirochetal infections do still have important secrets, and that should always be borne in mind. Briefly, in examining very early MS lesions they found that apoptotic death of (myelinating) oligodendrocytes occured *prior* to the arrival of white blood cells, ie, *prior* to inflammation. This is a problem for the autoimmune hypothesis, tho as the authors conceded in public correspondance, " our results do not rule out antibody or other humoral factors as effectors of oligodendrocyte apoptosis in early MS lesions " - and to my knowledge such antibody could conceivably be generated thru autoimmunity. I am very glad to see this finding is generating at least a litte discussion. Hopefully there will be alot more. But you know there wont *necessarily* be alot more, if you are familiar with the unreasonable reception that was accorded to the excellent Wirostko/ work on uveitis bacteria. This work was partly funded by the US Nat'l MS Society, which I mention since I verged on bashing them in my previous post. Marshall DVM might be correct about that group stifling investigation of the possible spirochetal etiology - I dont know - but I'm afraid I didnt find convincing the full text of his article on that etiology and the history of its investigation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.