Epstein-Barr virus, most plausible cause of multiple sclerosis: Study
USA: A new study has confirmed that the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) may be a likely cause of multiple sclerosis (MS). Results of the study, published in the journal Science, showed that the risk of MS increases 32-fold after infection with EBV.
Multiple sclerosis, a chronic inflammatory demyelinating disease of the central nervous system whose etiology is unknown, affects 2.8 million people worldwide. Demyelination in the brain and spinal cord is an immune-mediated process that is known to be possibly triggered by a viral infection. The top candidate seemed to be the Epstein-Barr virus among the putative causal agents.
Against the above background, Kjetil Bjornevik, Department of Nutrition, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA, and colleagues tested the hypothesis that MS is caused by EBV in a cohort consisting of more than 10 million young adults on active duty in the US military, 955 of whom were diagnosed with MS during their period of service.
The researchers evaluated 801 MS case-patients and 1566 matched controls without MS. Most of them were under 20 at the time of their first blood collection. Symptom onset for those who developed MS was a median of 10 years after the first sample was obtained.
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