Abstract

Eighteen patients with acute optic neuritis underwent optic nerve magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) before and after injection of gadolinium-diethylene triamine pentacetic acid (Gd-DTPA). Ten were re-examined 4 weeks later. Leakage of Gd-DTPA across the blood-optic nerve barrier was a consistent finding in the acute lesion, and its presence was associated with abnormal visual acuity and colour vision, retro-ocular pain on eye movement, and afferent pupillary defect, and a reduced amplitude of the P100 component of the visual evoked potential. Gd-DTPA leakage had ceased in 9/11 nerves when restudied 4 wks later, and this evolution was associated with improved visual acuity and an increased P100 amplitude. Leakage is likely to reflect inflammation, and we conclude that the latter plays an important part in the production of conduction block and clinical deficit, and that its resolution is an important step in clinical remission from acute episodes of demyelination.

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