Poser criteria | |
---|---|
Purpose | Diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis |
Poser criteria are diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis (MS). They replaced the older Schumacher criteria,[1] and are now considered obsolete as McDonald criteria have superseded them. Nevertheless, some of the concepts introduced have remained in MS research, like CDMS (clinical definite MS), and newer criteria are often calibrated against them.[2] The criteria were unveiled in the Annals of Neurology in 1983 by a team led by Dr. Charles M. Poser.[3]
The article that introduced them also defined the concepts of attack, historical information, clinical evidence, paraclinical evidence, lesion typical of MS, remission, separate lesions and laboratory support, which are necessary to apply the criteria.[citation needed]
The criteria considers MS as the presence of demyelinating lesions disseminated in time and space, and they are oriented specially to prove the dissemination. Based on this, the authors defined a set of rules that can yield five conclusions:[3] CDMS, LSDMS, CPMS, LSPMS or noMS. Poser diagnosis of CDMS is known to have a sensitivity of 87% respect postmortem autopsy examination[4]
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)