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#1 | ||
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Junior Member
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Once you have been diagnosed with MS, how often does your Neuro want you to have another MRI? Thanks
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#2 | |||
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Member
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Usually every three years.
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Bill SCUBA, the true meaning of Life San Francisco Maru 2009 USS Monitor 1996, 1997, 1999 Andrea Doria 1996, 1998 USS Wilkes Barre 1991 |
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#3 | ||
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Junior Member
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#4 | |||
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Junior Member
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It depends on your situation and doctor. I was meant to do once a year, but since my MS has kicked up some more and I'll be starting Tysabri soon, I'm at every six months.
My friend is stable on Copaxone and is on a once a year schedule with the same doc I have, while another friend of mine sees a different doc and only gets an MRI if something changes drastically.
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It's just a flesh wound!- The Black Knight, Monty Python and the Holy Grail . |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | tovaxin_lab_rat (12-26-2008) |
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#5 | |||
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Elder
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Happy New Year!
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Cheryl Dx: MS 2001 CRPS 2009 “When everything seems to be going against you, remember that the airplane takes off against the wind, not with it.” - Henry Ford Last edited by tovaxin_lab_rat; 12-27-2008 at 12:15 AM. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | woodhaven (12-27-2008) |
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#6 | ||
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Junior Member
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Quote:
Thanks MrsBones. I definitely need to make a decision before the middle of January. |
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#7 | |||
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Grand Magnate
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I know I have MS, even though I denied it for many years.
![]() Neurology. 2008 Dec 10 MRI as an outcome in multiple sclerosis clinical trials Daumer M, Neuhaus A, Morrissey S, Hintzen R, Ebers GC. From the Sylvia Lawry Centre for Multiple Sclerosis Research (SLC) (M.D., A.N.); Technical University of Munich (M.D.); Ludwig Maximilians-University (M.D.), Munich, Germany; Department of Neurology (S.M.), University Hospital of Rennes, France; Department of Neurology (R.H.), University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, Netherlands; Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics (G.C.E.), Oxford University; and Department of Clinical Neurology (G.C.E.), John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK. INTRODUCTION T2-weighted and gadolinium enhanced T1-weighted MRI scans measure plaque burden and breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, respectively, in multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions. These have become widely used outcome measures for monitoring disease activity in clinical trials and clinical practice. However, their use as surrogates or biomarkers for disability and relapses, key clinical outcome measures, has remained incompletely validated. METHODS: In a clinical trial database comprising 31 relapsing-remitting and secondary progressive MS trial placebo groups, we assessed relationships between 1) T2 lesion load (TLL) change and disability change and 2) gadolinium enhancement of MS lesions and on-study relapses with univariate and multivariate analyses. RESULTS: In relapsing-remitting MS, TLL change (n = 223) made no independent contribution to predicting change in disability from baseline to trials' end. Similarly, inclusion of gadolinium enhancing lesions (n = 170) into multivariate models did not independently contribute to the predictive value for on-trial relapses. In secondary progressive MS, a small effect of TLL was found for disability change (n = 355) but in multivariate analysis this accounted for less than 5% of the variance in end-of-trial disability. Results were replicated in independent datasets, more than doubling effective sample sizes. CONCLUSIONS: MRI measures widely used in trials of relapsing-remitting and progressive multiple sclerosis add little if anything independently to the clinically relevant relapse and disability outcomes. These results reemphasize the importance of validating potential surrogate markers against clinical measures and highlight the need for better MRI markers of disease activity and progression. PMID: 19073945 http://www.neurology.org/cgi/content...916.38629.43v1 Cherie
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I am not a Neurologist, Physician, Nurse, or Hairdresser ... but I have learned that it is not such a great idea to give oneself a haircut after three margaritas
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"Thanks for this!" says: | woodhaven (12-27-2008) |
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#8 | |||
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Junior Member
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I think the general idea is not to have one just for the sake of having one, but when used in conjunction with relevant relapse and disability to determine progression , (and yes, for me new disability showed my doc there was a need to switch treatment before I had my last MRI) it can be an important tool.
But it is just that...a tool. Not the end all ,be all of MS diagnosis or treatment. They are only a snapshot in time, what is going on at that very moment. Some lesions disappear and they can take quite a long time to appear in the first place.The lesions may or may not correlate to your symptoms. All they actually provide you with is an idea of what's going on at the time. So they may help you decide if a drug is not working at the moment , determine that there is nothing beside MS causing a problem or help the doc in diagnosis, but can not predict anything, as I think we all understand. No doctor or test can predict the future here. Ultimately, you decide when or if you have one.
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It's just a flesh wound!- The Black Knight, Monty Python and the Holy Grail . |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | woodhaven (12-27-2008) |
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#9 | |||
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Member
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As of next week, it will be one year since I was diagnosed and had my first MRI (January 4).
I've had 4 MRIs so far....I'm about once every 3 months - though the time between the last two was only 9 weeks as I ended up in a flare and they wanted to see if there was activity, so I went a few weeks early. Part of the HiCy protocol includes continuing the MRIs every 3 months and I'm quite glad as I like to know what's going on up there. Even though it's not reliably a predictor in studies, it seems to be a predictor/indicator in the course of my disease, which is fairly aggressive. |
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#10 | |||
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Grand Magnate
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Currently every 6 months, but am hoping that as long as I remain stable it will change to yearly.
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Strength comes in all types of packages, even those you don't expect Dx'd MS 2007, Fibro 2009 |
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