F
Fred D. Lublin
Researcher at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Publications - 334
Citations - 54203
Fred D. Lublin is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multiple sclerosis & Natalizumab. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 316 publications receiving 47075 citations. Previous affiliations of Fred D. Lublin include Corinne Goldsmith Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis & University of Delaware.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis: 2010 Revisions to the McDonald criteria
Chris H. Polman,Stephen C. Reingold,Brenda Banwell,Michel Clanet,Jeffrey A. Cohen,Massimo Filippi,Kazuo Fujihara,Eva Havrdova,Michael Hutchinson,Ludwig Kappos,Fred D. Lublin,Xavier Montalban,Paul L. O’Connor,Magnhild Sandberg-Wollheim,Alan J. Thompson,Emmanuelle Waubant,Brian G. Weinshenker,Jerry S. Wolinsky +17 more
TL;DR: These revisions simplify the McDonald Criteria, preserve their diagnostic sensitivity and specificity, address their applicability across populations, and may allow earlier diagnosis and more uniform and widespread use.
Journal ArticleDOI
Recommended diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis: Guidelines from the International Panel on the Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis
W. Ian McDonald,A Compston,Gilles Edan,Donald E. Goodkin,Hans-Peter Hartung,Fred D. Lublin,Henry F. McFarland,Donald W. Paty,Chris H. Polman,Stephen C. Reingold,Magnhild Sandberg-Wollheim,William A. Sibley,Alan J. Thompson,Stanley van den Noort,Brian Y. Weinshenker,Jerry S. Wolinsky +15 more
TL;DR: 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.
Journal ArticleDOI
Diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis: 2005 revisions to the "McDonald Criteria".
Chris H. Polman,Stephen C. Reingold,Gilles Edan,Massimo Filippi,Hans-Peter Hartung,Ludwig Kappos,Fred D. Lublin,Luanne M. Metz,Henry F. McFarland,Paul O'Connor,Magnhild Sandberg-Wollheim,Alan J. Thompson,Brian G. Weinshenker,Jerry S. Wolinsky +13 more
TL;DR: New evidence and consensus now strengthen the role of these criteria in the multiple sclerosis diagnostic workup to demonstrate dissemination of lesions in time, to clarify the use of spinal cord lesions, and to simplify diagnosis of primary progressive disease.
Journal ArticleDOI
Diagnosis of multiple sclerosis: 2017 revisions of the McDonald criteria
Alan J. Thompson,Brenda Banwell,Frederik Barkhof,Frederik Barkhof,William M. Carroll,Timothy Coetzee,Giancarlo Comi,Jorge Correale,Franz Fazekas,Massimo Filippi,Mark S. Freedman,Kazuo Fujihara,Steven L. Galetta,Hans-Peter Hartung,Ludwig Kappos,Fred D. Lublin,Ruth Ann Marrie,Aaron E. Miller,David Miller,Xavier Montalban,Xavier Montalban,Ellen M. Mowry,Per Soelberg Sørensen,Mar Tintoré,Anthony Traboulsee,Maria Trojano,Bernard M. J. Uitdehaag,Sandra Vukusic,Sandra Vukusic,Emmanuelle Waubant,Brian G. Weinshenker,Stephen C. Reingold,Jeffrey A. Cohen +32 more
TL;DR: The 2017 McDonald criteria continue to apply primarily to patients experiencing a typical clinically isolated syndrome, define what is needed to fulfil dissemination in time and space of lesions in the CNS, and stress the need for no better explanation for the presentation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Defining the clinical course of multiple sclerosis Results of an international survey
TL;DR: An international survey of clinicians involved with MS revealed areas of consensus about some terms classically used to describe types of the disease and other areas for which there was lack of consensus and proposed standardized definitions for the most common clinical courses of patients with MS.