Login / Signup

Spotlight on Trans-Synaptic Degeneration in the Visual Pathway in Multiple Sclerosis.

Angeliki G FilippatouPeter A CalabresiShiv SaidhaOlwen C Murphy
Published in: Eye and brain (2023)
A putative mechanism of neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis (MS) is trans-synaptic degeneration (TSD), whereby injury to a neuron leads to degeneration of synaptically connected neurons. The visual system is commonly involved in MS and provides an ideal model to study TSD given its well-defined structure. TSD may occur in an anterograde direction (optic neuropathy causing degeneration in the posterior visual pathway including the optic radiations and occipital gray matter) and/or retrograde direction (posterior visual pathway lesions causing retinal degeneration). In the current review, we discuss evidence supporting the presence of anterograde and retrograde TSD in the visual system in MS.
Keyphrases
  • multiple sclerosis
  • mass spectrometry
  • ms ms
  • optical coherence tomography
  • white matter
  • spinal cord
  • diabetic retinopathy