Intracortical multiple sclerosis lesions are not associated with increased lymphocyte infiltration

Author:

Bø L1,Vedeler C A2,Nyland H2,Trapp B D3,Mørk S J4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Haukeland University Hospital, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway,

2. Department of Neurology, Haukeland University Hospital, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway

3. Department of Neurosciences, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH, USA

4. Department of Pathology, Haukeland University Hospital, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway

Abstract

The present study examined the extent and distribution of lymphocyte infiltration in demyelinated lesions in the cerebral cortex of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. Tissue sections from the brain of 10 MS patients and five patients without neurological disease were double labeled for myelin basic protein and the lymphocyte markers C D3, C D4, C D8, C D45RO, and C D20. The highest density of C D3- positive T cells was found in MS white matter lesions (40.4/10 high power fields (hpf)). Fewer T cells were detected in cortical lesions that extended through both white and gray matter (12.1/10 hpf; P B-0.001). The lowest number of T cells was detected in intracortical demyelinated lesions (1.1/10 hpf). This was equal to the lymphocyte density in nondemyelinated cerebral cortex within the same tissue block (1.1/10 hpf) or cerebral cortex in control brains (1.8/10 hpf). A similar distribution was found using the C D4, C D8, and C D45RO markers. C D20-positive B cells were scarce in all specimens examined. These data indicate that areas of intracortical demyelination in chronic MS are not associated with an increased number of lymphocytes, or an altered distribution of lymphocyte subsets, when compared with control areas in MS and control patients. This finding indicates that the extent of lymphocyte infiltration in MS lesions is dependent on lesion location.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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