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Acute demyelinating disease in a chimpanzee three...
Journal article

Acute demyelinating disease in a chimpanzee three years after inoculation of brain cells from a patient with MS

Abstract

Brain cells from a patient with classic multiple sclerosis were inoculated intracerebrally into the frontal lobe of a newborn chimpanzee. The animal developed acute quadriplegia three years, two months later and was killed four days after the onset of symptoms. Central nervous system lesions were primarily localized in the spinal cord at root entry zones; these were characterized by demyelination and regeneration of myelin by Schwann cells.

Authors

Rorke LB; Iwasaki Y; Koprowski H; Wroblewska Z; Gilden DH; Warren KG; Lief FS; Hoffman S; Cummins LB; Rodriguez AR

Journal

Annals of Neurology, Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 89–94

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

January 1, 1979

DOI

10.1002/ana.410050113

ISSN

0364-5134

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