| Literature DB >> 33324914 |
H Tumani1,2, H F Petereit3, A Gerritzen4, C C Gross5, A Huss6, S Isenmann7, S Jesse6, M Khalil8, P Lewczuk9, J Lewerenz6, F Leypoldt10, N Melzer5, S G Meuth5, M Otto6, K Ruprecht11, E Sindern12, A Spreer13, M Stangel14, H Strik15, M Uhr16, J Vogelgsang17, K-P Wandinger18, T Weber19, M Wick20, B Wildemann21, J Wiltfang17, D Woitalla22, I Zerr23, T Zimmermann24.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis is important for detecting inflammation of the nervous system and the meninges, bleeding in the area of the subarachnoid space that may not be visualized by imaging, and the spread of malignant diseases to the CSF space. In the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of neurodegenerative diseases, the importance of CSF analysis is increasing. Measuring the opening pressure of CSF in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and at spinal tap in normal pressure hydrocephalus constitute diagnostic examination procedures with therapeutic benefits.Recommendations (most important 3-5 recommendations on a glimpse): The indications and contraindications must be checked before lumbar puncture (LP) is performed, and sampling CSF requires the consent of the patient.Puncture with an atraumatic needle is associated with a lower incidence of postpuncture discomfort. The frequency of postpuncture syndrome correlates inversely with age and body mass index, and it is more common in women and patients with a history of headache. The sharp needle is preferably used in older or obese patients, also in punctures expected to be difficult.In order to avoid repeating LP, a sufficient quantity of CSF (at least 10 ml) should be collected. The CSF sample and the serum sample taken at the same time should be sent to a specialized laboratory immediately so that the emergency and basic CSF analysis program can be carried out within 2 h.The indication for LP in anticoagulant therapy should always be decided on an individual basis. The risk of interrupting anticoagulant therapy must be weighed against the increased bleeding risk of LP with anticoagulant therapy.As a quality assurance measure in CSF analysis, it is recommended that all cytological, clinical-chemical, and microbiological findings are combined in an integrated summary report and evaluated by an expert in CSF analysis.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33324914 PMCID: PMC7650145 DOI: 10.1186/s42466-020-0051-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Res Pract ISSN: 2524-3489
Indications for the diagnostic LP under consideration of the contraindications (see below)
| Suspected condition | |
| …Meningitis | |
| …Encephalitis | |
| …Myelitis | |
| …Neuroborreliosis | |
| …Neurotuberculosis | |
| ...Polyradiculoneuritis Guillain-Barré | |
| …Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy | |
| …Encephalomyelitis disseminata | |
| …Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder | |
| …Neurosarcoidosis | |
| …Neurolupus | |
| …Subarachnoidal hemorrhage | |
| …Meningiosis carcinomatosa | |
| …Meningiosis lymphomatosa | |
| ...Idiopathic intracranial hypertension | |
| ...Normal pressure hydrocephalus | |
| Differential diagnosis of the following core symptoms: | |
| -Headache | |
| -Dementia syndrome | |
| -Sepsis with unknown focus of infection |
Recommendations for diagnostic LP in thrombocytopenia (see also cross-sectional guideline of the Bundesärztekammer on therapy with blood components and plasma derivatives (https://www.bundesaerztekammer.de/fileadmin/user_upload/downloads/pdf-Ordner/WB/QLL_Haemotherapie-englisch.pdf))
| Thrombocyte count /μL | Procedure for a planned LP |
|---|---|
| > 50,000 | If there are no other contraindications. |
| 10,000–50,000 | Relative contraindication. An increased risk of bleeding is to be expected. Substitute thrombocytes if necessary. |
| < 10,000 | Absolute contraindication. Thrombocyte substitution before LP mandatory. |
Fig. 1Example of an integrated total CSF report
Steps of CSF analysis
| Analytical step | Parameters | Indication/Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency analysis | Appearance (if contaminated with blood, 3-tubes test), cell count, total protein, lactate | Acute inflammation, bacterial or viral, cerebral bleeding (SAH, ICH) |
| Basic analysis | Quotients Albumin, IgG, IgA, IgM, and oligoclonal bands | Intrathecal inflammation, Blood-CSF barrier function |
| Differential cell count | Differentiation of inflammation, bleeding, and neoplastic involvement | |
| Gram staining and culture | Pathogen detection (bacteria, fungi) | |
| Extended analysis | Pathogen-specific antibody (Antibody index) | Infection or autoimmune disease |
| CNS-specific proteins | Neurodegenerative diseases (AD, CJD, ALS, Narcolepsy, etc.) | |
| Immune cytology, tumor markers | Tumor: confirmation and subtyping | |
| Antigen detection | Pathogen detection (bacteria, fungi) | |
| PCR | Standard for viruses and Tbc, some other bacteria and parasitesa |
AD Alzheimer’s disease, ALS amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, CJD Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, ICH intracerebral hemorrhage, SAH subarachnoid hemorrhage, Tbc tuberculosis
a e.g., if findings from staining and antigen detection are negative
Reference ranges for routine parameters
| Parameter | Method | Reference range |
|---|---|---|
| Appearance | Inspection | clear, colorless |
| Cell count (Leukocytes/μL) | Manual evaluation by light microscopy, Fuchs-Rosenthal chamber | < 5 |
| Differential cytology staining | Manual evaluation by light microscopy, Pappenheim staining | Lymphomonocytic (ratio 2:1 bis 3:1) |
| Total protein (mg/L) | Nephelometry/Turbidimetry | < 500 |
| L-Lactate (mmol/L) | Enzymatic | 0.9 – 2.7 (age dependent) [ |
| Glucose (L/S) | Enzymatic | > 0.50 |
| Albumin (L/Sx10−3) | Nephelometry | < 5 - 10 (age dependent) |
| Ig-Synthesis in CNS | Nephelometry | Not detectable |
| Pathogens | Gram staining, culture, light microscopy, PCR, antigen detection | Not detectable |
| Pathogen-specific antibody (intrathecal synthesis) | Enzyme immunoassays | Not detectable |
| Brain-specific proteins (pg/mL) | Enzyme immunoassays | Tau-Protein (< 450) Phospho-Tau (< 60) Abeta1-42 (> 550) (Laboratory- and assay dependent ranges) Abeta1-42/Abeta1-40-Quotient (> 0,1) |
L/S = CSF/Serum quotient
Fig. 2Quotient diagram. Logarithmically the albumin quotient is plotted against the IgG quotient. The thick diagonal line represents the QLim. This corresponds to the mean value of the expected IgG concentration plus 3 times the standard deviation. For IgG quotients above this line, an intrathecal IgG synthesis can therefore be assumed with a probability of a false-positive result of < 0.5%. The red vertical line represents the age-related limit value for barrier function (formula: age/15 + 4, the upper normal range of a 60-year-old person would be 8 × 10− 3). This results in different areas with differently interpreted findings (and disease examples). An advantage of the quotient diagrams over a numerical calculation is that typical finding constellations can be assigned to a disease at a glance: Possible constellations resulting from QIgG and QAlb are: (1) Normal findings, e.g., no indication of inflammatory CNS process. (2) Isolated barrier dysfunction, e.g., Guillain-Barré syndrome or spinal canal stenosis. (3) Isolated inflammation in the CNS, e.g., multiple sclerosis or past infectious encephalitis. (4) The combination of (2) and (3), e.g., acute neuroborreliosis, neurotuberculosis. (5) Implausible findings (e.g., high-dose hook effect, puncture soon after immunoglobulin infusion)
Fig. 3IgG band patterns. Five different patterns can be found, with patterns 2 and 3 indicating intrathecal synthesis, as shown in Fig. 3: Type 1: Normal finding. Type 2: Isolated OCB in the CSF. Type 3: Identical OCB in cerebrospinal fluid and serum, additionally isolated OCB in the CSF. Type 4: OCB with identical (mirror image) distribution in the CSF and serum. Type 5: Monoclonal bands (usually identical distribution in the CSF and serum) as an indication of systemic gammopathy [51]
Fig. 4IgG band patterns illustrated graphically. Abbrev.: CSF, cerebrospinal fluid;, Ser, serum; Poly, polyclonal; Oli, oligoclonal; Mono, monoclonal [7]
Overview of diagnostically relevant routine parameters in acute bacterial meningitis (BM) and frequency of “typical” and “atypical” changes depending on the bacterial pathogen
| Parameter | Diagnostic (first) LP | Remarks / Special features |
|---|---|---|
| Cell count (CC) / μLμL | „typical "CC ≥1000: ca. 80% Mean (SD): 7753 (14736) CC 100–999: 14% CC < 100: 7% | [ |
Median (IQR): 1842 (291–4419) CC > 999: 75.8-78% CC < 100: 17-19.3% CC < 10: 5% | ([ | |
Median (IQR): 5328 (1590–12.433) CC > 999: 80-82% CC 100–999: 6.5-11%; CC < 100: 9-11.6%, initial CSF normal: 1.7% (CC ≤5/μL, TP ≤0.50 g/l und Glucose ratio CSF / blood ≥0.40) | [ | |
Median (IQR): 680 (291–1545) CC < 100: 11% | [ | |
Median (Min-Max): 1470 (0–11,400) CC > 999: 92.9%; CC 100-999: 7% CC < 100: 0% | [ [ | |
| B-streptococci | Median (Min-Max): 1230 (0-80,000) CC „normal": 6% | [ |
| Newborn meningitis | CC ≤ 3: 10% | [ |
| Differential Cell count | „typical "= granulocytic | |
| ≤20% Granulocytes: 5.9% | [ | |
| ≤20% Granulocytes: 8.2% | [ | |
| < 50% Granulocytes: 26% | [ | |
| ≤20% Granulocytes: 4.3% | [ | |
| B-Streptococcus | Median (Min-Max): 87 (0-100) % | [ |
| Total protein (TP) in mg/l | „typical "TP > 1000 Mean (SD): 4900 (4500) | [ |
| Median (IQR): 2700 mg/l (1400–5800) | [ | |
| Median (IQR): 4500 mg/l (2200–7000) | [ | |
| Median (IQR): 2500 mg/l (1760–3650) | [ | |
| Median: 1800 mg/l | [ | |
| B streptococci | Median (Min-Max): 2480 mg/l (200-16,000) | [ |
| Newborn meningitis | TP < 400: 0% TP 410-1200: 24% TP > 1200: 76%, | [ |
| Lactate (mmol/L) | „typical "Lactate ≥3.5 l diverging reference ranges, recommended cut-off: 3.9 mmol/L (=35 mg/dl) Man (SD): 16.51 (6.1) Median (IQR): 9.9 (6.8-12.9) mmol/L | [ |
| DD bacterial versus viral meningitis | Lactate as sensitive differentiation criterion (Meta-analysis: [ Sensitivity untreated BM: 98% Sensitivity after preantibiosis: 49% | Cave: Lactate increase also found in status epilepticus, cerebral infarction, ICB, Tumor, Herpes encephalitis [ |
| Macroscopy / Gram staining | positive 63-72% no preantibiosis: 63% with preantibiosis: 62% | [ [ |
| positive: 85.2% | [ | |
| positive: 72.5-89% | [ | |
| positive: 37% | [ | |
| positive: 83.3% | [ | |
| CSF culture | Positive no preantibiosis: 65.8-88%, positive with preantibiosis: 61.4-70% | [ |
| positive: 75-87% | [ | |
| positive: 79.5% | [ | |
| positive: 50% | [ | |
| Blood culture | positive no preantibiosis: 66% positive with preantibiosis: 48% | [ |
| positive: 42.6-67% | [ | |
| positive: 12.6 -57% | [ | |
| positive: 61% | [ | |
| positive: 50% | [ | |
| Newborn meningitis | positive: 62% | [ |
Overview of bacterial pathogens as a function of age
| Newborn | |
| 50-60% | |
| 14-26% | |
| 0-3.5% | |
| 0-9% | |
| Other pathogens | 10-25% |
| Children | |
| 38-56% | |
| 34-46% | |
| 2-12% | |
| Other pathogens | 6-13% |
| Adults | |
| 37-59% | |
| 24-43% | |
| 0.8-10% | |
| 0.02-3.7% | |
| Other pathogens | 10-17% |
CSF findings in patients with neuroborreliosis
| Parameter | Diagnostic LP | LP after initiating antibiotic treatment | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell count | ≤4/μL: 0% 5-30/μL: 1% > 30/μL: 99% | normalized | Increase may indicate reinfection |
| Cell type | - lymphocytes: - activated lymphocytes or Plasma cells: up to 20% | normalized | |
| Albumin ratio | < 8 × 10−3: 1% 8-32 × 10− 3: 99% | normalized | |
| Quantitative IgG, IgA, and IgM synthesis | IgM > 0%: 70% IgG > 0%: 20% IgA > 0%: 1% | May persist for years | |
| OCBs | positive in 70% of neuroborreliosis patients | May persist for years | Differentiatial diagnosis for multiple sclerosis is necessary |
| Borrelia AI ≥1.5 | positive in > 80% | May persist for years | Not suitable in suspected reinfection |
| Borrelia PCR in CSF | Positive in 10-30% | Negative after appropriate antibiotic treatment | |
| Lactate | < 3.5 mmol/L: 95% > 3.5 mmol/L: 5% | ||
| CXCL13 | Sensitivity 80 - 100% | Normalized after antibiotic treatment | Not specific, elevated in CNS lymphoma and inflammation |
Spectrum of viral pathogens and diagnostic methods
| Pathogen | Diagnostic method (1st choice) | Material | Diagnostic method (2nd Choice) | Material | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enterovirus (Echo, Coxsackie A/B) | RT-PCR Sensitivity 97% Specificity 100% | CSF Stool, rhinopharyngeal swab | Direct detection by electron microscopy | Stool | [ |
| Flavivirus (FSME) | Serology Sensitivity 99% Specificity 98% | Blood | RT-PCR (early Phase) AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
Herpes simplex virus Type 1 & 2 | DNA-PCR Sensitivity > 95% Specificity 100% | CSF | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| Varicella zoster virus | DNA-PCR Sensitivity 95% Specificity 100% | CSF | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| Cytomegaly virus | DNA-PCR Sensitivity 99% Specificity 99% | CSF | AI after 10-14 days pp65-Antigen | CSF Blood/ CSF | [ |
| Epstein-Barr virus | DNA-PCR Sensitivity 100% Specificity 100% | CSF | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| Human immune deficiency virus | Serology RT-PCR Sensitivity 99% Specificity 100% | Blood | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| John Cunningham virus | DNA-PCR Sensitivity 95% Specificity > 90% | CSF | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| Adeno virus | DNA-PCR Sensitivity 100% Specificity 99% | CSF | Antigen detection | CSF | [ |
| Hanta virus | DNA-PCR Sensitivity 95% Specificity 100% | CSF | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| Measles | Serology RT-PCR Sensitivity 100% Specificity 100% | Serum CSF | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| Mumps virus | Serology RT-PCR Sensitivity 90% Specificity 100% | Serum CSF | AI after 10-14 days pp65-Antigen | CSF Blood/ CSF | [ |
| Polio virus | Serology RT-PCR Sensitivity 100% Specificity 100% | CSF | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| Rabies virus | RT-PCR Sensitivity 99% Specificity 99% | CSF Blood Saliva | Direct detection by electron microscopy | CSF Saliva Brain | [ |
| Rubella virus | Serology RT-PCR Sensitivity 79% Specificity 100% | Serum CSF | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
| Zika virus | Serology RT-PCR Sensitivity 91% Specificity 97% | Serum CSF / Urine | AI after 10-14 days | CSF | [ |
Typical CSF findings in acute and subacute phases of viral CNS infections
| Parameter | Findings (diagnostic LP (days 1-7), before therapy) | Findings (follow-up LP (days > 10-14), during therapy) |
|---|---|---|
| CSF appearance | clear | clear |
| Cell count (Leukocytes/μL) | 5 – 1000 | << 1000 |
| Differential cell count | lymphomonocytic, in initial phase (days 1-3) small fraction of neutrophils | lymphomonocytic |
| Albumin ratio (L/S | < 20 | < 10 |
| Intrathecal Ig-Synthesis | No | Yes |
| Total protein (mg/L) | < 1000 | << 1000 |
| Lactate (mmol/L) | < 3.5 | < 3.5 |
| PCR in CSF | positive | negative |
| Antibody index | Not detectable or < 1.5 | > 1.4 |
Overview of routine CSF parameters and approximate frequency of pathological results in PML
| Parameter | 1st diagnostic lumbar puncture for PML | Follow-up during therapy (IRIS) a | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell number | ≤ 4/μL: 85% ≥ 5 - ≤ 50/μL: 10% > 50/μL: 5% | May increase during IRIS | Also dependent on the underlying disease and treatment. |
| Cell differentiation | Normal or slightly activted. Lympho-monocytic | Also dependent on the underlying disease and treatment. | |
| Total protein/ Albumin quotient | Normal: 50% Slightly elevated: 30% Severely elevated: 20% | ||
| Quantitative IgG-, IgA-, IgM-synthesis | IgG > 0%: 25% IgA > 0%: 0% IgM > 0%: 0% | Is highly dependent on the underlying diseaseb | |
| OCBs | 42% b | Highly dependent on the underlying diseaseb | |
| JCPyV-PCR | Positive: 70-80% | May increase during IRIS before it normalizes | At first manifestation of PML: Sensitivity: 60-90% Specificity: 100% |
aEmpirical values from own experience due to the lack of published systematic data
bValue from a study with primarily HIV-PML patients. In particular, the natalizumab-PML cases will show an intrathecal immunoglobulin synthesis and oligoclonal bands corresponding to the underlying multiple sclerosis
Diagnostic criteria for PML (according to [20])
| Certainty of PML diagnosis | Clinical features | MRI | JCPyV-PCR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definite | + | + | + |
| Probable | + | – | + |
| – | + | + | |
| Possible | + | + | −/ND |
| – | – | + | |
| Not PML | – | – | – |
| + | – | – | |
| – | + | – |
ND Not determined
Frequency of abnormal changes in routine CSF parameters in patients with multiple sclerosis [150]
| Parameter | Diagnostic LP | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Cell count | ≤4/μL: 40% 5-30/μL: 55% > 30/μL: 5% | Depends on LP and relapse time interval and on topography of lesion |
| Differential cell count | - lymphomonocytic: 100% - activiated lymphocytes or plasma cells (< 5% of all cells): 50-60% | |
| Albumin ratio | < 8 × 10−3: 90% 8-25 × 10− 3: 10% | Depends on LP and relapse time interval and on topography of lesion |
| Intrathecal IgG, IgA, and IgM synthesis in Reiber diagrams | IgG > 0%: 72% IgA > 0%: 8% IgM > 0%: 20% | In clinically confirmed MS |
| OCB | CSF specific OCB (Type 2 oder 3 patterns): 88-98% | |
| MRZ reaction | Measles: 78% Rubella: 60% Zoster: 55% | Positive in clinical definite MS, if AI > 1,4 for two of the viruses |
AI Antibody index, Ig Immunglobulin, MS Multiple sclerosis, OCB oligoclonal band
Summary of relevant CSF findings in neuropsychiatric lupus
| Parameter | Diagnostic LP | Follow-up LP (under immunosuppressive treatment) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell count | 1-400/μL in 30 to 44% of patients | ||
| Cell type | Lymphocytes, monocytes | ||
| Albumin ratio | < 8 × 10−3: 60% 8-25 × 10− 3: 40% | ||
| Quantitative IgG-, IgA-, IgM-synthesis | IgG > 0%: 30% IgA > 0%: 13% IgM > 0%: 17% | ||
| OCB | Type 2 or 3: 30% | Change to type 1 or 4 possible | |
MRZ reaction AI ≥1.5 | Measles: 30% Rubella: 30% Zoster: 40% | Intrathecal dsDNA antibodies in 20% |
CSF findings in patients with neurosarcoidosis
| Parameter | Diagnostic LP | Follow-up LP (under steroid treatment) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cell count | 0 to 575/μL < 5/μL 20% 5-30/μL 30% > 30/μL 50% | normalzed | Higher cell counts in leptomeningeal forms |
| Cell type | Predominantly lymphocytes | Basophilic and eosinophilic granulocytes possible | |
| CD4/CD8 ratio in CSF | No data available | ||
| Glucose ratio serum/CSF | < 0,4 in 50% | Glucose level may be reduced, but glucose ratio is more precise | |
| Lactate in CSF | elevated | Few data | |
| Albumin ratio | 8-25 × 10−3: 25 up to 100% | Total protein is generally elevated, but albumin ratio is more precise | |
| intrathecal IgG, IgA, and IgM-synthesis | 13 to 80% | Few data, intrathecal IgA production is seen | |
| OCB | CSF-specific OCB (type 2 or 3): 0-70% | ||
| ACE in CSF | 20% | Genotype has an impact; thus sensitivity is low | |
| soluble IL 2 receptor in CSF | elevated | Only in active disease and untreated patients |
CSF parameter of AE
| Antigen | Pleocytosis in CSF (%) | Dysfunction of the blood/CSF barrier (%) | CSF-specific OCBs (%) | Detection of disease-specific antibody | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Serum | CSF | |||||
| NMDAR | 70-90 | ~ 30 | 50-70 | (+) | + | [ |
| AMPAR | 50-70 | 40-60 | ~ 30 | +/(+) | + | [ |
| GABAAR | 40-70 | 20-70 | 20-30 | + | + | [ |
| GABABR | 60-70 | 30-40 | 60 | + | + | [ |
| GlyR | 0-40 | ~ 50 | 20-30 | + | + | [ |
| LGI1 | 10-20 | 20-30 | < 10 | + | (+) | [ |
| CASPR2 | 30-70 | n.b. | ~ 40 | + | (+) | [ |
| DPPX | 20-60 | ~ 30 | ~ 30 | + | + | [ |
| IgLON5 | 0-30 | 30-50 | 0-10 | + | + | [ |
| GAD65 | 0-20 | 10-30 | 0-70 | + | + | [ |
Overview of relevant CSF parameters and frequency of abnormalities during relapse and in remission
| Parameter | Relapse | Remission | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| NMOSD with AQP4-IgGa | |||
| Cell count | > 4/μL: ca. 60 - 78% > 100/μL: ca. 6% | Mostly normal (> 5/μL: 20%; > 100/μL: 0%) | Negative correlation between cell count and time (in days) since onset of relapse |
| Cell profile | - lymphocytes and monocytes (97% of cells) - neutrophils in 40-60% (rarely dominant cell population) - eosinophils in 10-15% - basophils in 2-4% - activated lymphocytes or - plasma cells in up to 20% (up to approximately 15% of all cells) | Less pathologically altered to normalized | |
| Albumin quotient | Increased in 55% (mostly 8-25, rarely > 25) | 30% | |
| Intrathecal IgG, IgA, IgM synthesis | QIgG > Qlim: 8% QIgA > Qlim: 6% QigM > Qlim: 13% | 0% 0% 0% | |
| OCB | CSF-restricted OCB (type 2 or type 3): 20-30% | 9% | No significant difference between AQP4-IgG-positive and AQP4-IgG-negative patients |
MRZ reaction AI ≥1.5 for at least two of the viruses | Almost always negative | Almost always negative | |
| Lactate | 43% | ~ 0% | |
| MOG-EM | |||
| Cell count | ≤5/μL:30-67% > 5/μL:33-70% > 100/μL6-28% | see a | |
| Cell profile | - lymphocytes and monocytes - plus neutrophils in 64% of cases with pleocytosis | Pleocytosis more frequent in patients with myelitis as first manifestation | |
Albumin quotient >Qlim(Alb): | >Qlim(Alb):32% | More common in patients with myelitis or brain stem encephalitis | |
| Intrathecal IgG, IgA, IgM synthesis | QIgG >Qlim: 7% | Investigated in one study only | |
| OCBs | CSF-restricted OCB (type 2 or type 3): 6-22% | ||
MRZ reaction AI ≥1,5 | Negative | Investigated in a small cohort only | |
aIn NMOSD with AQP4-IgG cell count, QAlb, QIgG, total protein, and lactate are more frequently increased and the increase is more pronounced in acute myelitis than in acute optic neuritis
Expected patterns of the CSF biomarkers in different neurodegenerative disorders
| Ab42 or Ab42/40 | Tau | pTau | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer’s disease | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ |
| Vascular Dementia | ↔ | (↑) | (↑) |
| bvFTD | ↔ | (↑) | (↑) |
| nf-avPPA | ↔ | (↑) | (↑) |
| svPPA | ↔ | ↔ | ↔ |
| lvPPA | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ |
| CBD | (↔) | (↑) | (↑) |
| DLB | (↔) | (↑) | (↑) |
Differentiation of NPH versus other dementias and controls
| Sensitivity | Specificity | |
|---|---|---|
| Aß1-42 | 0.813 | 0.506 |
| Total-Tau | 0.828 | 0.842 |
| Phospho-Tau | 0.943 | 0.851 |
Time course of various CSF alterations after SAH
| < 12 h | 12 h – 3 d | >3d | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pleocytosis | +++ | + | |
| Erythrocytes | +++ | ++ | + |
| Oxy – Hb | + | +++ | + |
| Erythrophages | + | ++ | |
| Bilirubin | (+) | ++ | +++ |
| Siderophages | + | ++ | |
| Ferritin | + | ++ | +++ |
| Bilirubin Crystals | (+) | ++ |
Immunological recognition of lymphoma cells in CSF
| B-NHL | T-NHL |
|---|---|
| Predominance of B cells | Strong deviation of CD4/CD8-ratio, High percentage of CD4+CD8+ cells |
Light chain restriction (Monoclonality) Lack of light chains Isolated IgM production | Loss of normally expressed antigens (e.g., CD7, CD5) |
| Co-expression of immature or aberrant antigens on or in B cells (e.g. CD 34, CD 10, CD 30, TdT, CD5) | Co-expression of immature or aberrant antigens on or in T cells (e.g.CD34, CD 10, CD 30, TdT, CD1a) |
Reference ranges of proteins for detection of CSF fistula
| Parameter | Reference range | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Beta-Trace Protein (mg/l) | Serum: 0.3–0.9 CSF: 8.9–29.2 Cut-off: 1.1 | Cave: renal insufficiency, endolymph fistula |
| Beta2-Transferrin | Qualitative detection | Cave: blood contamination |
CSF pressure is dependent on the caliber of the needle used for puncture
| Author | Subjects (n) | Population | Needle | Median | SD | Range | 2.5 | 97.5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mmH2O | ||||||||
| [ | 31 | Students, healthy | 22 und 26 G | 145 (22G); 157 (26G) | 37 (22G); 36 (26G) | 85 -230 (22G); 80 – 240 (26G) | 40 (22G); 50 (26G) | 250 (22G); 260 (26G) |
| [ | 354 | Neurological diseases without increased intracranial pressure | 20 and 22 G, atraumatic | 170 | 90-280 | 100 | 250 | |