Evaluation of high sensitivity C-reactive protein assay in cerebrospinal fluid on the Dimension RxL analyzer

Authors

  • Jozo Ćorić Department for Clinical Chemistry, University of Sarajevo Clinical Center, Bolnička 25, 71000 Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Aleksandra Pašić Department for Clinical Chemistry, University of Sarajevo Clinical Center, Bolnička 25, 71000 Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Mirsad Panjeta Department for Clinical Chemistry, University of Sarajevo Clinical Center, Bolnička 25, 71000 Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Jasminka Mujić Department for Clinical Chemistry, University of Sarajevo Clinical Center, Bolnička 25, 71000 Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17532/jhsci.2012.57

Keywords:

High sensitivity C-reactive protein, cerebrospinal fluid, bacterial meningitis

Abstract

Introduction: Low sensitivity and specificity in traditional laboratory tests became insufficient for accurate diagnostics and initiation of proper treatment of patients infected with bacterial meningitis. High sensitivity C reactive protein (hsCRP) may be an appropriate supplement for rapid diagnosis of bacterial meningitis. The subject of our investigation was the determination of C- reactive protein in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) during
acute bacterial meningitis.
Methods: HsCRP was analysed by a sensitive immunoturbidimetric assay using the Dimension RxL analyser (Siemens). Cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of C-reactive protein have been measured in 20 patients
(age range,1 to 50 years) presenting with acute bacterial meningitis and also in a non-infected, non-inflamed control group (n=25).
Results: The accuracy and precision of the method proved to be satisfactory. Repeatability of serial sampling for hsCRP described by coefficient of variation were CV=2.1-4.5%. This assay hsCRP in cerebrospinal fluid demonstrates adequate performance characteristics for routine clinical use. Elevated levels of CRP were found in 95% patients with bacterial meningitis. The mean CRP value in 25 uninfected control group was 0.25 mg/L (range 0.10-0.55). The mean CRP for patients with bacterial meningitis was 21.4 mg/L (range 0.40-100).
Conclusions: A sensitive assay for CRP in CSF would be an useful adjunct to conventional investigation of acute infective meningitis.

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Published

15.04.2012

Issue

Section

Research articles

How to Cite

1.
Evaluation of high sensitivity C-reactive protein assay in cerebrospinal fluid on the Dimension RxL analyzer. JHSCI [Internet]. 2012 Apr. 15 [cited 2024 Nov. 23];2(1):13-6. Available from: https://jhsci.ba/ojs/index.php/jhsci/article/view/76