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Tissue Bank |
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How
to register as a tissue donor Raising awareness of all those affected by MS Requesting
tissue for research on multiple sclerosis Promoting the Tissue Bank in the research community The Bank
Statement Articles
Links: Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland International Federation of Multiple Sclerosis
Societies E-mail: ukmstissuebank@imperial.ac.uk
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Banking on the
future .
While there are other
techniques that can be used to study MS - such as experimental animal models,
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and cell culture - they cannot adequately
substitute for studying samples of the actual tissue damages by MS.
Therefore, in order to further their studies, researchers are very reliant on
samples of tissue from people with a fully comprehensive medical history. Many questions can be addressed
using multiple sclerosis tissue. Are there different forms of the disease
that can be identified by the type of damage to the brain? What cells and
molecules are present, and are they responsible for damage or are they useful
for repair? How do the pictures produced by MRI relate to the damage to the
CNS, and how do these relate to particular symptoms?
The success of the bank will be reliant
of good communication. Indeed some studies can only be
carried out using MS tissue, such as the search for possible viruses that may
be involved I the disease. There is a lot of interest in the loss of nerve
fibres that become more vulnerable to damage following the stripping off of
their myelin sheaths. Researchers need to know to what extent this happens
and how early in the course of the disease it begins. This knowledge could
then be used to design therapies aimed at slowing this process down. Recently, researches have
identified new proteins, called growth factors, that may be able to stimulate
the replacement of lost oligodendrocytes (the cells which produce myelin, and
also protect nerve fibres from damage. These studies now need to be applied
to human tissue in order to assess their potential as new treatments. page 3 page 1 - introduction |
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The UK Multiple Sclerosis Tissue Bank Tel: 020
7594 9734 E-mail: ukmstissuebank@imperial.ac.uk |
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The UK Multiple Sclerosis Tissue Bank is funded by the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, registered charity 207495. |
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