Not necessarily. I also have white matter lesions within the brain but do not have MS. In fact in most cases they are simply a part of the aging process, migraines, deficiency of B6 and other reasons. You should talk with your neurologist before you worry to much. I have found this article that may be of help. http://www.dizziness-and-balance.com/disorders/central/pvm.htm
White matter is located on the inside of the brain.
This results in the destruction of the white matter of the brain and nervous system and causes the symptoms of Canavan disease
Grey matter is on the surface of the brain - it is the computing side. White matter is in the cenre of the brain it is the wires that join the computers.
No, the white matter in brain tissue is the area of brain tissue that contains the nerve fibre tracts with their covering of myelin which appears white.
There are two tissues that makes up the brain and the spinal cord. These are called the grey matter and the white matter. Grey matter is what covers about a half an inch of the brain. White matter is what makes up everything else of the brain.
Inside a brain is: grey matter (the bodies of the brain cells) and white matter (the fat covered projections of the brain cells).
In your brain surrounded by grey matter
White matter appears white in the brain because it is made up of nerve fibers covered in a fatty substance called myelin. Myelin reflects light, giving white matter its white color.
The corpus callosum is the largest white matter structure in the brain.
The gray-white matter junction in the brain is where the gray matter (composed mainly of neuron cell bodies) transitions into white matter (composed mainly of myelinated nerve fibers). This junction is found throughout the brain, reflecting the boundary between the outer cortex and the inner white matter tracts.
It is located in the brain,in the cerebrum
To oversimplify it significantly with an analogy, the grey matter is data processing neurons and the white matter is the myelin insulated cabling axons of those neurons that interconnects them to exchange data. Myelin is fatty, giving the white color to the white matter.