Scientists want to tackle multiple sclerosis by treating the kissing virus

Vaccines and antivirals are already undergoing trials


  • by
  • 02 28, 2024
  • in Science and technology

Multiple sclerosis (MS)MSMS CAR-TMSDNA affects around 1.8m people worldwide. Symptoms include fatigue, blurred vision, and trouble walking. Eventually, some people become severely disabled and complications from the condition can lead to death. There is currently no cure, and few treatments for advanced stages of the disease. But a series of recent findings have led to a tantalising idea—could a vaccine against a common virus finally consign to the history books?occurs when a patient’s immune system attacks their myelin, the fatty tissue that insulates the nerve cells of their brain and spinal cord and which enables those cells to pass on electrical signals. Most existing treatments focus on modulating or suppressing a patient’s immune system. Trials of a new type of immunotherapy, for example, known as , have recently begun. The treatment, which scientists hope could stop the progression of , involves removing a patient’s immune cells, editing the within, and then reinjecting the cells.

  • Source Scientists want to tackle multiple sclerosis by treating the kissing virus
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