Cerebrospinal fluid changes in tetanus: raised proteins and immunoglobulins in patients with severe disease |
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Authors: | J A Idoko A E Amiobonomo F I Anjorin G O Oyeyinka C Elechi |
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Affiliation: | Department of Medicine, Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital, Zaria, Nigeria. |
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Abstract: | 34 patients with tetanus were studied; all had normal serum proteins and albumin. Only 3 samples of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) contained cells (a few polymorphonuclear leucocytes). Protein levels in the CSF were elevated in 26 patients (76.5%); 11 cases with clinically mild tetanus had a mean CSF protein of 400 +/- 250 mg/litre (normal 100-400 mg/litre), while the CSF protein levels of 10 patients who died (mean 1596 +/- 985 mg/litre; P less than 0.005) and those of 4 others with severe disease who absconded were much higher (mean 1220 +/- 562 mg/litre; P less than 0.005). As a group, 19 patients with severe disease including the 10 fatal cases also had significantly higher mean CSF protein values (1582 +/- 938 mg/litre; P less than 0.005) than did the mild cases. Immunochemical analysis of the proteins using a radial immunodiffusion assay showed that these proteins were immunoglobulin G (IgG). Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated an oligoclonal gammaglobulin pattern, suggesting intrathecal IgG synthesis in these patients. These studies suggest that measurement of CSF proteins may supplement clinical evaluation in tetanus and that there may be a local immune stimulus (perhaps a tetanus antigen or to some other mitogen) in the central nervous system. |
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