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Challenges
(I) Multiple sclerosis: Genuine naked-eye identification
(I-1) Pioneering spinal cord findings
(I-2) Detection of distinctive brain lesions
(I-3) Macropathology: Unexploited key evidence
(II) Histological perspectives
(II-1) Tissue changes in specific lesions
(II-2) Histological lesion categorizations
(II-3) “Selective demyelination”: The facts
(II-3-a) Primary demyelinations: A commonplace phenomenon
(II-3-b) Reverberations of a histological misspecification
Blurred lesion identity
Marburg’s sclerosing inflammation
Ferraro’s even less discriminative lesion conception
Multiple sclerosis: Macropathological misspecifications
(II-3-c) The root of all evil: Demyelination
(II-3-d) Lymphocytic infiltrations: Active, or re-active?
(II-3-e) Primary inflammation: Adding to the confusion
(II-3-f) Histology: Not the key to understanding multiple sclerosis
(III) The neurologist’s standpoint
(III-1) Classical clinical observations
(III-2) CDMS: Chronically delusive misidentification syndrome
(IV) The specter of the multiple sclerosis agent
(IV-1) Lawless or specific pattern(s) of spread?
(IV-2) From randomly spread foci to multiple sclerosis-agent
(IV-3) Looking back in frustration
(V) Lesion explanation in physical terms
(V-1) The dynamics of lesion formation
(V-2) Cause of the injurious impulses
(V-3) The key to decoding multiple sclerosis: Specific data
References
Overview of Plates
© Dr. F. Alfons Schelling, M.D.