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=== Discovery ===
=== Discovery ===
* Multiple sclerosis was first described by a [[neurologist]], Dr. Jean martin Charcot in 1868. Previously, Dr. Robert Hooper (1773-1835), Robert Carswell (1793-1857), and Jean Cruveilhier (1791-1873) had noticed some of the [[MS]] clinical manifestations, but for the first time, Dr. Charcot described it as a distinct [[disease]] and named sclerose en plaque.  
* Multiple sclerosis was first described by a [[neurologist]], Dr. Jean martin Charcot in 1868.
* The [[signs]] and [[symptoms]] including [[dysarthria]], [[ataxia]], and [[tremor]] were called charcot’s triad.  
* Previously, Dr. Robert Hooper (1773-1835), Robert Carswell (1793-1857), and Jean Cruveilhier (1791-1873) had noticed some of the [[MS]] clinical manifestations, but for the first time, Dr. Charcot described it as a distinct [[disease]] and named sclerose en plaque.  
* The [[signs]] and [[symptoms]] including [[dysarthria]], [[ataxia]], and [[tremor]], were called charcot’s triad by Dr. Charcot for the first time.  


== Landmark Events in the Development of Treatment Strategies ==
== Landmark Events in the Development of Treatment Strategies ==

Revision as of 23:46, 27 November 2018

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Irfan Dotani

Overview

Multiple sclerosis was first described by a neurologist, Dr. Jean Martin Charcot in 1868 and named sclerose en plaque. The signs and symptoms including dysarthria, ataxia, and tremor were called 'Charcot’s triad'.

Historical Perspective

Discovery

  • Multiple sclerosis was first described by a neurologist, Dr. Jean martin Charcot in 1868.
  • Previously, Dr. Robert Hooper (1773-1835), Robert Carswell (1793-1857), and Jean Cruveilhier (1791-1873) had noticed some of the MS clinical manifestations, but for the first time, Dr. Charcot described it as a distinct disease and named sclerose en plaque.
  • The signs and symptoms including dysarthria, ataxia, and tremor, were called charcot’s triad by Dr. Charcot for the first time.

Landmark Events in the Development of Treatment Strategies

Famous Cases

One of the first suspected MS patients in history is Saint Lidwina (1380-1433). She had symptoms such as pain, lower extremities weakness, and vision loss.[1][2] The other MS suspected patient in history is Augustus Frederick d’este (1794-1848). His symptoms began at the age of 28 with vision loss, bladder dysfunction, numbness, weakness of legs and sexual dysfunction.[3]

References

  1. Charcot, J. Histologie de la sclerose en plaques. Gazette des hopitaux, Paris, 1868; 41: 554–555.
  2. Poser C (1994). "The dissemination of multiple sclerosis: a Viking saga? A historical essay". Ann. Neurol. 36 Suppl 2: S231–43. PMID 7998792.
  3. Firth, D (1948). The Case of August D`Esté. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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