Tags: research + causes.with.MS
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Researchers have discovered that calcium ions could play a crucial role in multiple sclerosis by activating enzymes that degrade the fatty sheath that insulates nerve fibers.
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Researchers at Purdue University have discovered that calcium ions could play a crucial role in multiple sclerosis by activating enzymes that degrade the fatty sheath that insulates nerve fibres.
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The exact cause of multiple sclerosis is unknown, but some experts believe exposure to environmental toxins or a viral infection might trigger the attack.
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When more than one member of a family is affected by multiple sclerosis (MS), their ages at disease onset are likely to be similar, but disease severity may not be.
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To identify clinical and demographic factors associated with long-term disability in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis.
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The study, to be published in the Dec. 3 advance online edition of Nature Immunology, lays the groundwork for a way to determine when a relapse is about to occur, and could eventually lead to a treatment to prevent relapses.
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A paper on the new findings is appearing in the November edition of the journal Lancet Neurology and the researchers who conducted the study of the Canadian multiple sclerosis data are speculating that something new has arisen in the environment in the pa
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The study reveals how immune system B-cells damage axons during MS attacks by inhibiting energy production in these nerve fiber cells, ultimately causing them to degenerate and die.
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A gene that helps to stave off the effects of multiple sclerosis (MS) has been discovered by scientists.
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Multiple sclerosis symptoms can be affected by a pair of "angel and devil" genes that fight to make a patient healthy or ill, Oxford University researchers have found.
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The Cure Map is a framework that we will construct in conjunction with key researchers and scientists to clearly spell out a concrete approach to isolating the cause or causes of MS.
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Our results demonstrate that an abnormal Th1 bias in DCs from MS patients related to IL-23 exists, and that antisense oligonucleotides specific to IL-23 can be used for immune modulation by targeting DC gene expression
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Vaccination against tetanus may offer protection against the development of multiple sclerosis (MS), according to a new study from Boston-based researchers
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This past week Art and I attended the “Second International Rare Neuroimmunologic Disorders Symposium” held in Baltimore, MD and organized by Johns Hopkins.
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The initiative on Gender Differences in MS was launched in 1998 to increase research attention on the question of why more women than men have multiple sclerosis, why it seems to affect women differently than men and what the biological differences betwee
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