Multiple Sclerosis Research - Diagnosis, Symptoms, Treatment, Prognosis

Multiple Sclerosis Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Multiple Sclerosis, including details on diagnosis, symptoms, treatment, prognosis.


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Men transmit MS more often to their children vs women: the Carter effect.

Kantarci OH, Barcellos LF, Atkinson EJ, Ramsay PP, Lincoln R, Achenbach SJ, De Andrade M, Hauser SL, Weinshenker BG

Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905, USA. kantarci.orhun@mayo.edu

OBJECTIVE: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is approximately twice as common among women as men. If men have greater physiologic resistance to MS, they might theoretically require stronger genetic predisposition than women to overcome this resistance. In this circumstance, men would be expected to transmit the disease more often to their children, a phenomenon known as the Carter effect. The authors evaluated whether the Carter effect is present in MS. METHODS: The authors studied 441 children (45 with definite MS) of an affected father or mother (197 families of interest) from 3598 individuals in 206 multiplex pedigrees. The authors compared transmission of MS from affected men with transmission from affected women. RESULTS: Fathers with MS transmitted the disease to their children more often (transmitted: 18, not transmitted: 99) than mothers with MS (transmitted: 27, not transmitted: 296) (p = 0.032; OR: 1.99, 95% CI: 1.05, 3.77). Adjusting for both the sex of the affected child and multiple transmissions from a single affected parent, the sex of the affected parent remained as an independent risk factor for transmission of MS to children, fathers transmitting more often than mothers (p = 0.036; OR: 2.21, 95% CI: 1.05, 4.63). CONCLUSIONS: The authors have demonstrated the Carter effect in multiple sclerosis (MS). These observations may be explained by greater genetic loading in men that leads to relative excess paternal vs maternal transmission. Linkage analysis in genetic studies of MS may be more informative if patrilineal transmission were given additional weighting.

Published 25 July 2006 in Neurology, 67(2): 305-10.
Full-text of this article is available online (may require subscription).

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Multiple Sclerosis Research Today Archive:

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Multiple Sclerosis Books

Libre de esclerosis multiple/ Healing Multiple Sclerosis

Libre de esclerosis multiple/ Healing Multiple Sclerosis