| Literature DB >> 26408034 |
Amir Ramezani1, Katarina Nägga2, Oskar Hansson3, Johanna Lönn4, Johanna Sjöwall5, Fateme Katoozian6, Sepahdar Mansouri7, Fariba Nayeri8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Due to anatomical restrictions, the inflammatory response to intracerebral bacterial infections exposes swollen brain tissues to pressure and ischemia, resulting in life-threatening damage. Rapid diagnosis and immediate empirical antibiotic therapy is highly important. However, diagnosing meningitis in patients after neurosurgery is complicated, due to brain tissue damage and changes in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) caused by surgery. Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is a local, acute-phase protein with healing properties. Previous studies on community-acquired septic meningitis reported high levels of intrathecally produced HGF. The present study focused on nosocomial meningitis in assessing the levels of HGF in the CSF.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26408034 PMCID: PMC4582940 DOI: 10.1186/s12987-015-0020-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fluids Barriers CNS ISSN: 2045-8118
Fig. 1Flow chart of the selection of CSF specimens from patient and control groups. Extra samples are the samples taken during stay on ward from patients with nosocomial meningitis
The CSF samples in groups (G1–G6)
| Groups 1–6 | Red blood cells (×109) | White blood cells (×109) | C-Met binding (RU)a | HSPG binding (RU)a | HGF (ng/ml) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Septic community-acquired meningitis (n = 22) | 200 (0.1–49,000) | 400 (3.6–8400) | 56 (9.6–965.3) | 6.7 (0–129) | 3.08 (0.58–17.51) |
| Aseptic/Subacute meningitis (n = 47) | 2.2 (0–1820) | 58 (0.6–1042) | 0 (0–462) | 0 (0-134) | 0.59 (0.18–2.1) |
| Septic nosocomial meningitis (n = 33) | 7000 (1–75,000) | 164 (0-2000) | 27.3 (0–116.4) | 0 (0–81.2) | 2.04 (0.125–11.59) |
| Nosocomial other infections (n = 76) | 3500 (0–350,000) | 18 (0.2-545) | 0 (0–25) | 0 (0–3.8) | 0.57 (0–3.26) |
| Alzheimer’s disease (n = 20) | ndb | ndb | 7.4 (0–26.1) | 1.3 (0–16.2) | 0.71 (0.43–1.47) |
| Normal CSF (n = 37) | – | – | 0 (0–7.1) | 0 (0–15.7) | 0.59 (0.02–1.16) |
All values represent median (range)
aNegative values in surface plasmon resonance are reported as 0
b nd not
Fig. 2Properties of HGF derived from different CSF samples were analyzed by using surface plasmon and ELISA techniques. a Binding to c-Met receptors; b Binding to HSPG receptors; c HGF concentrations (median). * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001, **** p < 0.0001
The sensitivity and specificity for the diagnostic accuracy of CSF-derived HGF binding affinity to c-Met receptor; a cut off value = 10.0 response units (RU) was used to diagnose septic meningitis in community-acquired and nosocomial meningitis
| Sub-groups | Nosocomial fever | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| C-met affinity | Meningitis | Other infections | Total |
| ≥10 | 23 | 5 | 28 |
| <10 | 10 | 71 | 81 |
| Total | 33 | 76 | 109 |
Values represent the numbers of patients in each group. The sensitivity and specificity of the diagnostic test were 69.7 and 93.4 %, respectively (a: nosocomial meningitis/other febrile infections post neurosurgery) and 95.4 % respective 95.7 % (b: community acquired septic/aseptic meningitis)
As shown the correlation between c-Met binding (cut-off 10 RU) and number of white blood cells in CSF (cut-off 10 x 109) differs based on the number of cells
| White blood cells (×109) | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| <10 | ≥10 | ||
| c-Met binding (RU) | |||
| <10 | 30 | 51 | 81 |
| ≥10 | 0 | 28 | 28 |
| Total | 30 | 79 | 109 |
Fig. 3HGF binding to c-Met receptor in CSF was measured before (circle) and after (square) treatment in 13 cases with nosocomial meningitis. These were divided into groups based on whether they responded effectively to therapy (Efficient therapy, N = 7) or did not respond to therapy (Therapy failure, N = 6); * p < 0.05