The new study used spinal fluid as an alternative window into the brain to examine those first attacks.
Dr. Steven Schutzer of Rutgers New Jersey Medical School analyzed spinal fluid stored from nine patients who had experienced early symptoms that turned out to be MS. Using a special high-powered technology, he uncovered a small cluster of proteins that was unique to those first attacks. Compared with spinal fluid from healthy people and from a dozen MS patients who've had the disease longer, that signature distinguished the early patients, Schutzer reported in the journal PLoS One.
If larger studies prove the value of these potential markers, doctors one day might do a quick spinal tap to test for them in people with early symptoms, said Dr. Patricia Coyle of Stony Brook University in New York, an MS specialist who co-authored the study. Today, doctors occasionally do spinal taps on possible MS patients, but they're looking for different substances that can signal an autoimmune disease, not specifically MS.
But the new study contained a big surprise: The myelin damage that is MS' trademark occurs in what's called the brain's white matter, the fibers that act like a telephone network for brain cells to communicate. The proteins that Schutzer found suggest there's also damage to the gray matter, a different tissue that contains the nerve cells themselves. Scientists have known that gray matter plays some role in MS, but not what.
"That's a striking finding," Coyle said, because it points to potential new targets for therapies. "These data suggest to us the gray matter injury is critical and happens early."