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Donald W. Paty

Western University

Publishes on Multiple Sclerosis Research Studies, Peripheral Neuropathies and Disorders, T-cell and B-cell Immunology. 92 papers and 21.6k citations.

92Publications
21.6kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Recommended diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis: Guidelines from the international panel on the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis
W. I. McDonald, Alistair Compston, Gilles Edan et al.|Annals of Neurology|2001
Cited by 6.9k

The International Panel on MS Diagnosis presents revised diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis (MS). The focus remains on the objective demonstration of dissemination of lesions in both time and space. Magnetic resonance imaging is integrated with dinical and other paraclinical diagnostic methods. The revised criteria facilitate the diagnosis of MS in patients with a variety of presentations, including "monosymptomatic" disease suggestive of MS, disease with a typical relapsing-remitting course, and disease with insidious progression, without clear attacks and remissions. Previously used terms such as "clinically definite" and "probable MS" are no longer recommended. The outcome of a diagnostic evaluation is either MS, "possible MS" (for those at risk for MS, but for whom diagnostic evaluation is equivocal), or "not MS."

<i>In vivo</i> visualization of myelin water in brain by magnetic resonance
Alex L. MacKay, Kenneth P. Whittall, Julian Adler et al.|Magnetic Resonance in Medicine|1994
Cited by 922

We exploit the intrinsic difference in magnetic resonance spin-spin relaxation time, T2, between water associated with myelin sheaths and water in other central nervous system tissue in order to measure myelin water content within any region of an image or to generate indirectly a myelin map of the brain. In normal volunteers, myelin water maps give the expected myelin distribution. In multiple sclerosis patients, lesions exhibit different myelin water contents providing insight into the demyelination process unavailable from conventional magnetic resonance images. In vivo myelin measurement has important applications in the clinical management of multiple sclerosis and other white matter diseases.

<i>In vivo</i> measurement of <i>T</i><sub>2</sub> distributions and water contents in normal human brain
Kenneth P. Whittall, Alex L. MacKay, D A Graeb et al.|Magnetic Resonance in Medicine|1997
Cited by 794

Using a 32-echo imaging pulse sequence, T2 relaxation decay curves were acquired from five white- and six gray-matter brain structures outlined in 12 normal volunteers. The water contents of white and gray matter were 0.71 (0.01) and 0.83 (0.03) g/ml, respectively. All white-matter structures had significantly higher myelin water percentages (signal percentage with T2 between 10 and 50 ms) than all gray-matter structures. The range in geometric mean T2 of the main peak for both white and gray matter was from 70 to 86 ms. T2 distributions from the posterior internal capsules and splenium of the corpus callosum were significantly wider (width is related to water environment inhomogeneity) than those from any other white- or gray-matter structures. Thus, quantitative measurement and analysis of T2 relaxation reveals differences in brain tissue water environments not discernible on conventional MR images. These differences may make short T2 components reliable markers for normal myelin.