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Relationship between neurological features and intrathecal synthesis of IgG antibodies to Treponema pallidum in untreated and treated human neurosyphilis. Journal of neurology. [J Neurol] Journal article

 
TitleRelationship between neurological features and intrathecal synthesis of IgG antibodies to Treponema pallidum in untreated and treated human neurosyphilis.
Author(s)Prange HW, Moskophidis M, Schipper HI, Müller F 
SourceJ Neurol 1983; 230(4):241-52.
MeSHAntibody Formation
Central Nervous System
Humans
Immunoglobulin G
Neurosyphilis
Treponema pallidum
AbstractIn syphilitic patients with or without CNS involvement the correlation of Treponema-specific IgG titre per milligram total IgG in CSF and serum (ITPA index) is a dependable source of information on the synthesis of treponemal IgG antibodies in the CNS. This index also provides a more reliable definition of asymptomatic neurosyphilis. Further, a discrimination between Treponema-specific and Treponema-non-specific IgG synthesis in the CNS is possible. Of 261 patients with clinical symptoms of neurosyphilis, 82% had a local production of treponemal IgG antibodies as shown by an elevated ITPA index. In patients with neurosyphilis and intrathecal synthesis of Treponema-specific IgG antibodies, 94% had oligoclonal IgG in the CSF. Comparison of different CSF protein alteration groups in untreated and treated neurosyphilitic patients showed that early diagnosis (and early treatment) led to improvement of the impairment of the blood-CSF barrier and reduction of the immune reaction in the CNS. However, synthesis of treponemal IgG antibodies in the CNS could persist as a 'scar syndrome' even after adequately cured infection.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
PubMed ID6198484
  
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