🍐 In this episode of PodBites, Muhsin Ali and Mohammad AbdulRahim guide you through demyelinating diseases, with a special focus on Multiple Sclerosis (MS) — exploring how immune-mediated destruction of myelin disrupts neural signaling and leads to the neurological symptoms seen in this classic exam and clinical condition.
🎙️ Tune in to explore:
- The structure and function of myelin, and how it enables rapid saltatory conduction along axons
- The key difference between demyelinating diseases and dysmyelinating disorders (leukodystrophies)
- The immune-mediated pathophysiology of MS, including autoreactive T cells, macrophages, and B-cell antibody production
- Why oligodendrocytes in the CNS are the primary targets of autoimmune attack
- The formation of demyelinating plaques in the white matter, and their classic periventricular distribution
- How MS lesions appear on MRI (T2 hyperintense plaques) and why contrast enhancement indicates active inflammation
- The characteristic histologic findings, including foamy macrophages, perivascular lymphocytes, and gliosis
- The clinical patterns of MS, including relapsing–remitting, primary progressive, secondary progressive, and benign MS
- Common neurological manifestations such as optic neuritis, weakness, sensory changes, gait disturbance, and bladder dysfunction
- The three pillars of MS diagnosis: clinical criteria (McDonald criteria), MRI findings, and CSF analysis showing oligoclonal IgG bands
🌟 A structured, high-yield guide to understanding multiple sclerosis — connecting neuroanatomy, immunology, pathology, and clinical presentation to help you recognize this important neurological disease with confidence.