This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
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Risk factors for CCSVI found to be similar to those for developing MS

  • “This is the first time a connection has been found between Epstein-Barr virus and CCSVI.”

    Robert Zivadinov
    Professor of Neurology
  • Zivadinov talks about the study. Watch a video.

By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
Published: December 1, 2011

The first study to investigate risk factors for the vascular condition called CCSVI (chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency) in volunteers without neurological disease has identified what the researchers call a remarkable similarity between this condition and possible or confirmed risk factors for multiple sclerosis (MS).

The UB study investigated associations between CCSVI and demographic, clinical and environmental risk factors in a large control group of volunteers who did not have known central nervous system disease.

“Our results suggest that risk factors for CCSVI in this group of volunteers are remarkably similar to those of possible or confirmed importance to MS, but we do not yet understand the whole story,” says Robert Zivadinov, professor of neurology in the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, and senior author on the study.

Published on Nov. 30  in PLoS One, the current study of 252 volunteers “was designed to help provide scientists and the MS patient community with new information that, combined with the results of studies that are still ongoing at UB, will ultimately help explain CCSVI and its relationship to MS,” according to Kresimir Dolic, lead author on the study. Dolic, a radiologist from the Department of Radiology, University Hospital, Split, Croatia, was a visiting fellow at the Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center, part of UB’s Department of Neurology, where the study was conducted.

CCSVI refers to impaired blood flow from the central nervous system to the periphery. It has been hypothesized that this narrowing of veins restricts blood flow from the brain, altering brain drainage, and may contribute to brain tissue injury that is associated with MS.

Yet, while CCSVI has generated intense interest among MS patients worldwide, and while independent scientific studies, including one of the largest to date being conducted by Zivadinov and UB colleagues, have suggested an association with MS, none have found conclusively that the condition is associated with MS.

For this reason, the UB team decided it was critical to proceed with this prospective study to determine the risk factors for CCSVI in individuals without neurological disease.

The study found that CCSVI risk factors occurred more frequently in those with a history of mononucleosis, i.e. infected with Epstein-Barr virus; those with irritable bowel syndrome; and those who smoke or have a history of smoking.

“All three are confirmed risk factors for MS,” says Bianca Weinstock-Guttman, second author on the study and UB professor of neurology.  The results showed that individuals with CCSVI were 2.7 times more likely than individuals without CCSVI to have infectious mononucleosis, 3.9 times more likely to have irritable bowel syndrome and 1.98 times more likely to have a history of smoking.

“Our finding that a risk factor that is highly significant for MS—Epstein-Barr virus, indicated by a history of infectious mononucleosis—is strongly associated with CCSVI, is important,” says Zivadinov.

“This is the first time a connection has been found between Epstein-Barr virus and CCSVI.

“We know that Epstein-Barr virus is associated with an increased risk for MS,” he explains. “We also know that having mononucleosis when you are young increases the MS risk several-fold. So our finding that Epstein-Barr virus is also correlated with CCSVI is a novel finding that must be explored in future studies.”

In addition, individuals with heart disease—which is not a known MS risk factor—were 2.7 times more likely to have CCSVI, and those with heart murmurs in particular were 4.9 times more likely to have CCSVI. Zivadinov adds that the study’s finding of a weak, protective effect from the use of dietary supplements also was noted and has to be explored further.

The UB team cautions that the study was preliminary and that these findings must be expanded upon and confirmed in further studies.

The volunteer subjects were all part of the prospective Combined Transcranial and Extracranial Venous Doppler Evaluation study at UB. They were either independent individuals or spouses or relatives of MS patients.

The controls were purposely selected from different sources of recruitment, Zivadinov explains.

“Spouses had no genetic similarity but may have shared environmental risk factors with MS patients, while relatives of MS patients had shared both genetic and environmental background,” he says. “However, no differences in risk factors or frequency of CCSVI were found according to the various sources of recruitment.”

All volunteers were screened for medical histories and underwent physical exams and Doppler sonography examinations of the neck; they also responded to an extensive environmental questionnaire. Individuals were considered to have CCSVI if they had at least two positive venous hemodynamic criteria on Doppler sonography.

Besides Zivadinov and Weinstock-Guttman, additional co-authors on the paper are Karen Marr, Vesela Valnarov, Ellen Carl, Jesper Hagemeier, Christina Brooks and Colleen Kilanowski, all of UB’s Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center; David  Hojnacki of the Jacobs Neurological Institute of UB and Kaleida Health; and Murali Ramanathan, professor of pharmaceutical science, UB School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences.

The research was funded by the Buffalo Neuroimaging Analysis Center, Baird MS Center and the Jacobs Neurological Institute, all of UB, as well as the Direct MS Foundation and the Jacquemin Family Foundation.