Background: Cerebrospinal fluid bacterial culture is the gold-standard for confirmation of acute bacterial meningitis, but many cases are not culture confirmed. Antibiotics reduce the chance of a microbiological diagnosis. Objective to evaluate efficacy of Heparin-binding protein in diagnosis of bacterial meningitis.
Patients: 30 patients diagnosed with acute bacterial meningitis, 30 viral meningitis, and 30 subjects with normal CSF findings.
Design: Diagnosis was based on history, clinical criteria, CSF examination, latex agglutination & culture, and sensitivities and response to therapy. HBP was measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent technique in both serum & CSF.
Results: Cerebrospinal fluid HBP levels averaged 0.82±0.3ng/mL in controls, 3.3±1.7ng/mL in viral and 174.8±46.7ng/mL in bacterial meningitis. Mean serum level was 0.84±0.3ng/mL in the controls, 3.7±1.9ng/mL in viral, and 192.2±56.6ng/mL in bacterial meningitis. Both HBP levels were significantly higher in patients with bacterial meningitis. Cut-offs of 56.7ng/ml and 45.3ng/ml in cerebrospinal fluid & serum showed 100% overall accuracy. Even in patients who received prior antibiotics, remained elevated.
Conclusion: Serum Heparin-binding protein serves as a non-invasive potential marker of acute bacterial meningitis even in partially treated cases.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6328899 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjm.2018.05.007 | DOI Listing |
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