CSF Evaluation of Neurosyphilis

4/02/01 (Beer)

 

RE:  A young black male with HIV, headache, and positive serum RPR.

 

Question:  What are the typical CSF findings in neurosyphilis?

 

<2> 95141188

South African Medical Journal. 84(10):682-4, 1994 Oct.

The usefulness of cerebrospinal fluid tests for neurosyphilis.

<8> 82001369

British Journal of Venereal Diseases. 57(4):232-7, 1981 Aug.

Diagnosis of neurosyphilis by examination of the cerebrospinal fluid.

 

 

<2>

Unique Identifier: 95141188

Authors: Russouw HG. Roberts MC. Emsley RA. Joubert JJ.

Institution: Department of Psychiatry, University of Stellenbosch, Tygerberg, W. Cape.

Title: The usefulness of cerebrospinal fluid tests for neurosyphilis.

Source: South African Medical Journal. 84(10):682-4, 1994 Oct.

Abstract: To determine the usefulness of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tests for syphilis at a large academic hospital, clinical and laboratory data on 644 patients in whom such testing was requested over a 12-month period were analysed. In 198 cases (31%) the Treponema pallidum haemagglutination (TPHA) screening test could not be performed because of insufficient fluid. Thirty-eight of the remaining patients were diagnosed as having active neurosyphilis. Examination of 22 files of patients who had a positive TPHA and fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption (FTA-Abs) test together with a negative CSF Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) test revealed that other CSF measures indicating disease activity (CSF protein, cells or IgG index) were not utilised optimally. In 10 (45%) of these patients neurosyphilis was not diagnosed despite either abnormal or incomplete CSF biochemical analysis, indicating that if the CSF VDRL is used as the sole marker for disease activity, some cases of neurosyphilis are likely to be missed.

 

 

<8>

Unique Identifier: 82001369

Authors: Luger A. Schmidt BL. Steyrer K. Schonwald E.

Title: Diagnosis of neurosyphilis by examination of the cerebrospinal fluid.

Source: British Journal of Venereal Diseases. 57(4):232-7, 1981 Aug.

Abstract: Thirty-six patients with reactive results in the cerebrospinal fluid to the Treponema pallidum haemagglutination assay (CSF-TPHA) were investigated by further serological tests for confirmation of active neurosyphilis. The results of the TPHA and fluorescent treponemal antibody tests were reactive in all CSF samples from patients with acute untreated neurosyphilis and from most patients with late latent syphilis but no signs of involvement of the central nervous system. The demonstration of 19S-IgM antibodies against Treponema pallidum in the CSF was a better indication of activity of the disease than the Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test. Ten of 11 patients with untreated acute neurosyphilis had reactive results in the solid-phase haemadsorption test for CSF-IgM (CSF-IgM-SPHA test). The TPHA index, which relates the CSF-TPHA titre to the albumin quotient and thus excludes errors from disturbed function of the blood-brain barrier, was above 100 in all but one of the patients with acute neurosyphilis but below 100 after treatment. Patients with late latent syphilis and without CNS signs had TPHA indices below 5. Thus a nonreactive CSF-TPHA test result excludes neurosyphilis but reactive CSF-IgM-SPHA results and TPHA indices above 100 strongly indicative active disease.

 

 

 

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