1. Quantification of cerebrospinal fluid lactic acid in the differential diagnosis between HIV chronic meningitis and opportunistic meningitis
- Author
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Clea E Ribeiro, Laura Lúcia Cogo, Sérgio Monteiro de Almeida, Luine R. Vidal, Marisol Dominguez Muro, Luis Felipe Cavalli Pessa, João Cesar Beenke França, Indianara Rota, Kátia Boritza, Meri Bordignon Nogueira, Sonia Mara Raboni, and Ronald J. Ellis
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Fungal meningitis ,Tuberculosis ,Adolescent ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,Clinical Biochemistry ,HIV Infections ,Article ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Neurosyphilis ,Young Adult ,medicine ,Viral meningitis ,Humans ,Lactic Acid ,Child ,Cryptococcus neoformans ,biology ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Meningoencephalitis ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Meningitis, Viral ,Child, Preschool ,Chronic Disease ,Immunology ,Female ,business ,Meningitis ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Background: Approximately 40% of HIV infected patients have chronic meningitis at various stages during the infection, 59% are asymptomatic. This is a diagnosis of exclusion and a confounding factor in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis, any other causes of chronic meningitis by opportunistic or co-infection must be ruled out. The aim of this study was to analyze CSF lactic acid (LA) as an adjuvant biomarker in chronic meningitis due to HIV. Methods: CSF LA was quantified in 223 CSF samples by the Dimension AR (Dade Behring, Deerfield, IL, USA), distributed into nine groups: 1) HIV positive with an increase in CSF WBCs (n=17); 2) HIV positive with normal CSF (n=20); 3) enterovirus meningitis (n=33); 4) Herpesviridae meningoencephalitis (n=30); 5) fungal meningitis (n=25); 6) tuberculosis (TB) meningitis (n=17); 7) toxoplasmosis (n=18); 8) neurosyphilis (n=6); 9) control group (n=57). Results: CSF LA (median; IQR) was higher in samples with TB meningitis (5.5; 2.9–7.5 mmol/L) and Cryptococcus neoformans meningitis (3.9; 2.7–5.8 mmol/L) compated with samples with HIV chronic meningitis (1.7; 1.4–1.9 mmol/L) and other groups (p≤0.0001). For the diagnosis of HIV chronic meningitis, using a cut-off of 3.5 mmol/L, CSF LA showed high sensitivity and negative predictive value, although low specificity. Conclusions: CSF LA helps to discriminate between C. neoformans or TB meningitis and HIV chronic meningitis: CSF LA can be included with the methods currently used to identify these specific pathogens, though it does not replace them. It is rapid, inexpensive and easy to perform, and can be used in developing countries.
- Published
- 2011
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