| Literature DB >> 34268621 |
Simon Schading1, Tim M Emmenegger1, Patrick Freund2.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is a life-changing event with drastic implications for patients due to sensorimotor impairment and autonomous dysfunction. Current clinical evaluations focus on the assessment of injury level and severity using standardized neurological examinations. However, they fail to predict individual trajectories of recovery, which highlights the need for the development of advanced diagnostics. This narrative review identifies recent advances in the search of clinically relevant biomarkers in the field of SCI. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Pathophysiology; Predictive model; Prognostic factors; Severity assessment; Spinal cord injury
Year: 2021 PMID: 34268621 PMCID: PMC8282571 DOI: 10.1007/s11910-021-01134-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep ISSN: 1528-4042 Impact factor: 5.081
Figure 1.Lesion characteristics derived from standard MRI sequences. A Mid-sagittal T1-weighted MR image with the a-p diameters of the spinal canal at injury site (Di) and at nearest normal levels above (Da) and below (Db) the lesion, including the equation for MCC. B Mid-sagittal T2-weighted MR image with the a-p diameters of spinal cord at maximum injury site (di) and at nearest normal levels above (da) and below (db) the lesion, including the equation for MSCC. C IMLL measured on a mid-sagittal T2-weighted MR image as the rostrocaudal length of the T2w hyperintense lesion. D Mid-sagittal T2-weighted MR image with a T2w hyperintense lesion for the determination of ventral and dorsal tissue bridges as indicated. Modified from Freund et al. [29]
Summary of spinal cord injury serum/CSF biomarkers
| Biomarker | Pathophysiological process/origin | Main findings and diagnostic/prognostic utility | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| GFAP | Glial cell injury | Discrimination between AIS sub-groups by concentrations during early phase after SCI. Lower levels associated with better neurological recovery | Dalkilic et al, 2018 [ |
| S-100β | Glial cell injury | Discrimination between AIS sub-groups by concentrations during early phase after SCI. Lower levels associated with better neurological recovery | Dalkilic et al, 2018 [ |
| NF-L, NF-H | Axonal injury | Higher levels in SCI patients compared to controls during acute phase. NF-L was correlated with long-term outcome, while NF-H showed no significant associations | Ahadi et al, 2015 [ |
| Tau | Neuronal injury | Elevated levels during acute phase after SCI and discrimination between AIS sub-groups. Levels correlated with long-term functional outcome | Dalkilic et al, 2018 [ |
| NSE | Neuronal cell body injury | Elevated levels in SCI patients without differences between AIS sub-groups. Inconsistent findings regarding predictive utility | Ahadi et al, 2015 [ |
| IL-6, IL-8 | Inflammation | Increased levels during acute and subacute phase. Predictive of AIS conversion in patients | Dalkilic et al, 2018 [ |
| MCP-1 | Inflammation | Elevated early after SCI. Results about prognostic utility are inconsistent | Dalkilic et al, 2018 [ |
| Albumin | Hepatic synthesis | Hypoalbuminemia after SCI was associated with poor long-term neurological outcome | Tong et al, 2018 [ |
| microRNAs | Various | Severity-dependent distinct changes in the expression profile after SCI with up- and downregulation of certain microRNAs | Sun et al, 2018 [ |
Overview of serum/CSF biomarkers with their pathophysiological origin and a short summary of their diagnostic/prognostic utility after SCI