“…In 1995, a study by Challoner et al (13) found HHV-6 in the oligodendrocytes of MS patients but not controls and found a higher concentration of infected cells in areas of demyelination compared to unaffected white matter; it was the first time that HHV-6 was related to MS. Since then, a variety of studies have investigated the possible role of HHV-6 in MS with contradictory results between those which support the possible involvement of HHV-6 in MS pathogenesis (1-5, 14, 17, 19, 21, 37, 38, 42, 44, 46), and those which refute that association (31,32,41); this controversy may be interpreted in the context of the different laboratory techniques (DNA extraction, PCR method, amount of template in the reaction), different groups of MS patients, different control populations, and different study designs (transversal, longitudinal).…”