p88
The Brain is well protected from being injured by allergic processes, untill the Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB), a physiologic system necessary for the normal function of the Brain, is breached.
Attempts to localise the site of this barrier to some specific anatomic structure led finally to the conclusion that every membrane existing between blood and Brain may contribute
to the BBB.
The Brain requires an exceptionally vigorous circulation of blood during both day and night. Brain cells deprived of sufficient Oxygen, begin to die within minutes.
The Oxygen, Glucose, etc., continually conveyed to the Brain by the bloodstream pass to the Brain cells from the blood Capillaries. Under normal circumstances any blood cells, such as Lymphocytes, are prevented from leaving these.
The BBB seems to be most vulnerable, at the point where the tiny Capillaries join together to form minute Veins (Venules), and this is the beginning of the return journey of the blood from the Brain to the Heart.
It is around these Venules of the White Matter of the Brain and Spinal Cord that the Multiple Sclerotic plaques form and this happens in those regions where the circulation is most sparse.
Their development around small blood vessels is the central "hard" fact relating to Multiple Sclerotic lesions.
The first sign of a new plaque seen by the microscope is the escape of some Lymphocyte from Venule to Brain tissue. Lymphocytes are the cells that make up our Immune System. Like the Nervous System, this penetrates most tissues of the body.
Oddly, the two systems seem to avoid each other: the BBB prevents Lymphocytes from coming into contact with Nerve Cells. Thus, the movement of a Lymphocyte to Brain tissue is a visible sign of a fault in the BBB.
New plaques as seen in autopsies of acute cases are not sclerotic; they are infiltrations by fluid of the nerve tissue surrounding blood vessels. That is, the patch is not sclerotic
initially but fluid, edematous; it only becomes so later.
Conversely, the old patches are sclerosed. The agent or factor that makes the coats of these vessels permeable to Serum is the crux of the matter.
p89
Evidence does indicate the frequent presence of a small Venule in the center of the younger and smaller lesions. While Venules appear to have "some influence on determining the sites of origin of the plaques, they do not determine the subsequent evolution or form of the plaque.
The view that the plaque develops as the direct result of occlusion, probably due to Thrombosis, has its champions as well as detractors.
It has been suggested that temporary Occlusion of small blood vessels in the CNS resulting from Agglutination and aggregation of blood platelets may be responsible.
And, indeed, platelet stickiness is increased during exacerbations and returns to normal in the quiescent phases. This rise in degree of Adhesiveness may be associated with Histamine, a chemical released by the platelets in response to entry into the CNS of
some Allergen.
The resultant clumping of the platelets causes blockage of small Venules, although perhaps only of transient duration.
Since platelet stickiness presumably is widespread thru the bloodstream as a whole, why are the effects of the platelet MicroThrombi restricted to the CNS? Why are only the Brain and Spinal Cord affected?
One possible reason is that, in general, the peripheral tissues have relatively large ExtraCellular Spaces and a system of Lymphatic drainage.
Whereas, the ExtraCellular Spaces in the CNS is almost certainly small (Expanded ExtraCellular Space in plaque tissue is an indication of BBB insult) and the Brain and Spinal Cord have no Lymphatic System.
p90
The effects of even temporary blockage of small blood vessels are therefore likely to be greater in the CNS than in other tissues.
Also, in addition to the Hypoxia following Occlusion, the small ExtraCellular space and the absence of Lymphatic drainage, will tend to minimise the dilution of the area of Histamine; and other possible cytotoxic compounds, released from the Platelet Thrombi.
The blood supply to the Brain and Spinal Cord normally increases quickly during the first ten years of life, but then there is a surprising change, for although the blood supply of
the Nerve Cells (Gray Matter) continues to increase during the second decade of life, the blood supply of the White Matter is slowly reduced during this period
Apparently due to the fact that by the age of about twelve years the Myelin sheaths have
acquired their full thickness and the process of mere maintenance as opposed to growth makes less demands on circulation.
MS rarely appears before the age of fifteen, and it may be significant that at this age the vulnerable areas of the White Matter are experiencing some reduction in their supply of blood for physiologic reasons.
p95
Classical views on the BBB usually include the notion that it is not present in early life, but develops gradually as the individual develops, to become fully functional only in maturity.