Multiple Sclerosis: A Comprehensive Spectrum of Symptoms Beyond Motor Dysfunction
Majed AlluqmaniMultiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic autoimmune-mediated neurodegenerative disease that affects young adults. The diagnosis of MS currently based on the McDonald criteria, which based on four core principles: the presence of a symptomatic demyelinating syndrome, an objective neurologic finding, the dissemination in space (DIS), and the dissemination in time (DIT). In addition, the diagnosis of MS relies on the exclusion of any alternative diagnosis. This may implicate the absence of systemic non-neurological symptoms and signs, such as rheumatological, cutaneous, or ophthalmological findings. Nevertheless, the non-neurological symptoms are commonly observed in patients with MS either at the onset of MS, which therefore can delay the diagnosis and the incrementation of a disease-modifying therapy, or during the course of the disease progression. The purpose of our review is to highlight non-neurological symptoms of MS that frequently go undiagnosed or mistakenly linked to other conditions, aiming for the more accurate and earlier diagnosis of MS.