Pathologie-biologie
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The contribution of magnetic resonance imaging techniques to the clinical prognosis of multiple sclerosis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a diagnostic technique with a high sensitivity for the detection of lesions, but with a poor pathological specificity. In the case of multiple sclerosis (MS), the improvement of diagnostic efficacy depends on a careful analysis of the clinical presentation and the use of increasingly stringent MRI criteria aimed at improving the specificity of the conventional MRI T2 sequences. ⋯ These new MRI techniques allow a more precise assessment of the pathological mechanisms involved in MS, such as edema, blood brain barrier break-down, demyelinisation, gliosis, cellular infiltration and axonal loss; they provide a better means of establishing the correlation between clinical impact and the destructive nature of the MS lesion. The importance of axonal loss has recently been confirmed in MS by analyzing MRI spectroscopic and neuropathological findings. In addition to magnetization transfer imaging, MR diffusion imaging and functional MRI are being intensively studied in order to assess their contribution to the study of reversibility of the degenerative process.