학술논문

Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency: case-control neurosonography results.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Annals of Neurology. Jun2013, Vol. 73 Issue 6, p721-728. 8p.
Subject
*CEREBRAL veins
*CHRONIC diseases
*LONGITUDINAL method
*MULTIPLE sclerosis
*NEURORADIOLOGY
*RESEARCH funding
*SPINAL cord
*TRANSCRANIAL Doppler ultrasonography
*VENOUS insufficiency
*COLOR Doppler ultrasonography
*BLIND experiment
*CASE-control method
Language
ISSN
0364-5134
Abstract
Objective: Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) has been implicated in the pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis (MS). We sought to determine whether neurosonography (NS) provides reliable information on cerebral venous outflow patterns specific to MS.Methods: This was a single-center, prospective case-control study of volunteer MS and non-MS participants. A neurosonologist, blind to the subjects' diagnosis, used high-resolution B-mode imaging with color and spectral Doppler to systematically investigate, capture, and record extracranial and intracranial venous drainage. These neuroimaging results were evaluated and scored by an expert blinded to subjects' information and with no interactions with the participants.Results: Altogether, 276 subjects were studied: 206 with MS and 70 non-MS. MS patients were older than non-MS subjects (48.3±9.9 vs 44.3±11.8 years, p<0.007), with durations from first symptoms and diagnosis of 13.7±10 and 9.9±7.8 years, and Expanded Disability Status Scale of 2.6±2.0. Overall, 82 subjects (29.7%) fulfilled 1 of 5 NS criteria proposed for CCSVI; 13 (4.7%) fulfilled 2 criteria required for diagnosis, and none fulfilled >2 criteria. The distribution of subjects with 0, 1, or 2 criteria did not differ significantly across all diagnostic groupings, between MS and non-MS subjects, or within MS subgroups. CCSVI was present in 7.14% of non-MS and 3.88% of MS patients (p=0.266). No significant differences emerged between MS and non-MS subjects for extracranial or intracranial venous flow rates.Interpretation: NS findings described as CCSVI are much less prevalent than initially reported, and do not distinguish MS from other subjects. Our findings do not support the hypothesis that CCSVI is causally associated with MS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]