Guest guest Posted May 29, 2002 Report Share Posted May 29, 2002 -- FOR THOSE STILL UNSURE OF A DIAGNOSIS MAKE SURE YOUR DOCTORS HAVE READ THIS ARTICLE. THIS IS JUST A BRIEF SUMMARY AND THEY CAN FIND THE FULL ARTICLE IN THE Journal of the Autonomic Nervous System. http://www.wemove.org/ema/em_1999_012.html Consensus statement on the diagnosis of multiple system atrophy S Gilman, PA Low, N Quinn, A Albanese, Y Ben-Shlomo, CJ Fowler, H Kaufmann, T Klockgether, AE Lang, PL Lantos, I Litvan, CJ Mathias, E Oliver, I Schatz, GK Wenning J Autonomic Nervous System 74 (1998) 189-192 MSA diagnostic criteria and terminology changes are offered by this consensus conference, convened under the co-sponsorship of the American Autonomic Society and the American Academy of Neurology. The authors group MSA symptoms into four clinical domains–autonomic and urinary dysfunction, parkinsonism, cerebellar dysfunction, and corticospinal tract dysfunction–and describe the range of features consistent with MSA within each domain. Criteria are then offered for establishing the involvement of each domain as part of the MSA diagnosis. Specifically: Autonomic and urinary dysfunction: orthostatic fall in BP by > 30 mm Hg systolic or 15 mmHg diastolic; OR urinary incontinence (persistent involuntary partial or total bladder emptying, accompanied by erectile dysfunction in men); OR both Parkinsonism: bradykinesia, plus at least one of rigidity, postural instability, or tremor Cerebellar dysfunction: gait ataxia, plus at least one of ataxic dysarthria, limb ataxia, or sustained gaze-evoked nystagmus Corticospinal tract dysfunction: no features are used to define the diagnosis. They define two diagnostic categories– " possible " and " probable " MSA–based on the number of features present plus poor response to levodopa. " Definite " MSA is defined histopathologically. (-- WITH AUTOPSY) Exclusion criteria(-- NOT LIKELY TO HAVE MSA IF ANY OF THESE ARE TRUE) are also offered, including onset < 30 years of age, family history, non-medication related hallucinations, and dementia. The authors suggest replacing the term " striatonigral degeneration " with " MSA-P " (for predominance of parkinsonian symptoms) and " sporadic olivopontocerebellar atrophy " with " MSA-C " (for predominance of cerebellar symptoms). They write " The term Shy Drager syndrome has been widely misused, and is no longer useful. " --- SO ACCORDING TO THE CONSENSUS COMMITTEE THERE IS ONLY MSA-P & MSA-C (POSSIBLE & PROBABLE) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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