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Traditionally, multiple sclerosis (MS) has been diagnosed on the basis of clinical evidence of dissemination in time and space. Previously, it could not be diagnosed in patients with single clinical episodes of demyelination known as clinic ally isolated syndromes. New diagnostic criteria from the International Panel of McDonald and colleagues incorporate MRI evidence of dissemination in time and space to allow a diagnosis of MS in patients with clinically isolated syndromes. After 1 year, the corresponding figures were 38 of 79 (48%) and 16 of 79 (20%), and after 3 years, they were 29 of 50 (58%) and 19 of 50 (38%). The development of MS with the new MRI criteria after 1 year had a high sensitivity (83%), specificity (83%), positive pred icative value (75%), negative predictive value (89%), and accuracy (83%) for clinically definite MS at 3 years. Use of the new McDonald criteria more than doubled the rate of diagnosis of MS within a year of presentation with a clinically isolated syndro me. The high specificity, positive predictive value, and accuracy of the new criteria for clinically definite MS support their clinical relevance. |
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disability,neurological McDonald criteria for MS MRI MRI,abnormal MRI,volumetry multiple sclerosis multiple sclerosis,diagnosis of multiple sclerosis,diagnostic criteria multiple sclerosis,monosymptomatic multiple sclerosis,prognosis multiple sclerosis,treatment of neurologic disease,diagnoses of prognosis treatment of neurologic disorder
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