Keeping an eye on MS
Citation Manager Formats
Make Comment
See Comments
This article requires a subscription to view the full text. If you have a subscription you may use the login form below to view the article. Access to this article can also be purchased.
Judging the effectiveness of MS treatments is tricky, largely as a consequence of the unpredictable clinical course of MS. Another challenge is to document disease progression, a problem accentuated by subclinical lesion activity and progressive atrophy found on MRI that neither the patient nor the physician can suspect.1 Clearly, we must seek improved clinical methods for evaluating patients with MS2 that extend the standardized disability status scales introduced by Kurtzke 40 years ago.3 Modern eye movement testing offers several possible advances. Eye movement examination has become more sensitive as clinicians have applied physiology to develop new tests.4 Topologic diagnosis grows ever more specific as anatomists refine the neural circuitry of eye movement control.5 This issue of Neurology contains two reports that demonstrate how the sensitivity and specificity of eye movement disorders can be productively used in evaluating MS.
Frohman et al.6 describe how an eye movement disorder can be used to identify an optimal technique for imaging brainstem lesions. They demonstrate that proton density imaging is particularly sensitive for lesion detection in the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) in patients with documented internuclear ophthalmoplegia (INO). The neural circuitry involved in INO is …
AAN Members
We have changed the login procedure to improve access between AAN.com and the Neurology journals. If you are experiencing issues, please log out of AAN.com and clear history and cookies. (For instructions by browser, please click the instruction pages below). After clearing, choose preferred Journal and select login for AAN Members. You will be redirected to a login page where you can log in with your AAN ID number and password. When you are returned to the Journal, your name should appear at the top right of the page.
AAN Non-Member Subscribers
Purchase access
For assistance, please contact:
AAN Members (800) 879-1960 or (612) 928-6000 (International)
Non-AAN Member subscribers (800) 638-3030 or (301) 223-2300 option 3, select 1 (international)
Sign Up
Information on how to subscribe to Neurology and Neurology: Clinical Practice can be found here
Purchase
Individual access to articles is available through the Add to Cart option on the article page. Access for 1 day (from the computer you are currently using) is US$ 39.00. Pay-per-view content is for the use of the payee only, and content may not be further distributed by print or electronic means. The payee may view, download, and/or print the article for his/her personal, scholarly, research, and educational use. Distributing copies (electronic or otherwise) of the article is not allowed.
Letters: Rapid online correspondence
REQUIREMENTS
You must ensure that your Disclosures have been updated within the previous six months. Please go to our Submission Site to add or update your Disclosure information.
Your co-authors must send a completed Publishing Agreement Form to Neurology Staff (not necessary for the lead/corresponding author as the form below will suffice) before you upload your comment.
If you are responding to a comment that was written about an article you originally authored:
You (and co-authors) do not need to fill out forms or check disclosures as author forms are still valid
and apply to letter.
Submission specifications:
- Submissions must be < 200 words with < 5 references. Reference 1 must be the article on which you are commenting.
- Submissions should not have more than 5 authors. (Exception: original author replies can include all original authors of the article)
- Submit only on articles published within 6 months of issue date.
- Do not be redundant. Read any comments already posted on the article prior to submission.
- Submitted comments are subject to editing and editor review prior to posting.
You May Also be Interested in
Dr. Deborah Friedman and Dr. Stacy Smith
► Watch
Related Articles
Alert Me
Recommended articles
-
Resident and Fellow Section
Pearls & Oy-sters: The medial longitudinal fasciculus in ocular motor physiologyT. C. Frohman, S. Galetta, R. Fox et al.Neurology, May 20, 2008 -
Resident and Fellow Section
Pearls and oy-sters of localization in ophthalmoparesisTeresa Buracchio, Janet C. Rucker et al.Neurology, December 10, 2007 -
Articles
Diagnosing disconjugate eye movementsPhase-plane analysis of horizontal saccadesAlessandro Serra, Ke Liao, Manuela Matta et al.Neurology, October 06, 2008 -
Articles
Unilateral INO is associated with ocular tilt reaction in pontomesencephalic lesionsINO plusA. Zwergal, C. Cnyrim, V. Arbusow et al.Neurology, August 18, 2008