Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2152718 Neurologia i Neurochirurgia Polska 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Background and purposeSubarachnoid hemorrhage is sometimes difficult to diagnose radiologically. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) ferritin has been proposed to be highly specific and sensitive to detect hemorrhagic central nervous system (CNS) disease. We analyzed here the specificity of CSF ferritin in a large series of various CNS diseases and the influence of serum ferritin.Materials and methodsCSF ferritin, lactate, protein and total cell count were analyzed in 141 samples: neoplastic meningitis (n = 62), subarachnoid hemorrhage (n = 20), pyogenic infection (n = 10), viral infection (n = 10), multiple sclerosis (n = 10), borreliosis (n = 5) and normal controls (n = 24). Cerebrospinal fluid ferritin was measured with a microparticle immunoassay. In addition, serum and CSF ferritin were compared in 18 samples of bacterial and neoplastic meningitis.ResultsIn CNS hemorrhage, median ferritin was 51.55 μg/L (sensitivity: 90%) after the second lumbar puncture. In neoplastic meningitis, the median CSF ferritin was 16.3 μg/L (sensitivity: 45%). Interestingly, ferritin was higher in solid tumors than that in hematological neoplasms. In 90% of pyogenic inflammation, ferritin was elevated with a median of 53.35 μg/L, while only 50% of patients with viral infection had elevated CSF ferritin. In ventricular CSF, median ferritin was 163 μg/L, but only 20.6 μg/L in lumbar CSF. Ferritin was normal in multiple sclerosis and borreliosis.ConclusionsFerritin was elevated not only in hemorrhagic disease, but also in neoplastic and infectious meningitis. Ferritin was not a reliable marker of the course of disease. The influence of serum ferritin on CSF ferritin is negligible. We conclude that elevated CSF ferritin reliably, but unspecifically indicates severe CNS disease.

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