Demyelinization was regularly conspicuous in the white matter of the rostral portions of the brains of 6 monkeys sacrificed 14 to 22 months after exposure of the ocular regions to 850 r.e.p. of 14 mev. neutron radiation and it was not present in the brain of a monkey 2 months after radiation under identical conditions; or in those of 5 non-radiated animals serving as controls. In early lesions, the individual myelin sheaths were varicose and fragmented, while the neurons, axons, and glial cells remained normal in appearance. With the passage of time, the degeneration of myelin became more marked and in later stages was accompanied by a degeneration of the axis cylinders, a proliferation of astrocytes and microglia, and minor cytological changes in the oligodendroglia, the whole process occurring essentially without inflammation or notable changes in the cerebral or meningeal blood vessels. The findings show that neutron radiation has the property of destroying myelin in the living animal and inducing changes that are notably similar in their pathogenesis to those that characterize disseminated encephalomyelitis in human beings.
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September 01 1956
DEMYELINIZATION INDUCED IN THE BRAINS OF MONKEYS BY MEANS OF FAST NEUTRONS : PATHOGENESIS OF THE LESION AND COMPARISON WITH THE LESIONS OF MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND SCHILDER'S DISEASE
F. Stephen Vogel,
F. Stephen Vogel
From the Department of Pathology of The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, New York, and United States Air Force School of Aviation Medicine, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas
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John E. Pickering
John E. Pickering
From the Department of Pathology of The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, New York, and United States Air Force School of Aviation Medicine, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas
Search for other works by this author on:
F. Stephen Vogel
From the Department of Pathology of The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, New York, and United States Air Force School of Aviation Medicine, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas
John E. Pickering
From the Department of Pathology of The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, New York, and United States Air Force School of Aviation Medicine, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas
Received:
May 25 1956
Online Issn: 1540-9538
Print Issn: 0022-1007
Copyright, 1956, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York
1956
J Exp Med (1956) 104 (3): 435–442.
Article history
Received:
May 25 1956
Citation
F. Stephen Vogel, John E. Pickering; DEMYELINIZATION INDUCED IN THE BRAINS OF MONKEYS BY MEANS OF FAST NEUTRONS : PATHOGENESIS OF THE LESION AND COMPARISON WITH THE LESIONS OF MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND SCHILDER'S DISEASE . J Exp Med 1 September 1956; 104 (3): 435–442. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.104.3.435
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