High-resolution 1H NMR spectroscopy of cerebrospinal fluid in spinal diseases.
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Abstrè
Twenty-nine patients with disk herniations, 7 patients with intraspinal tumors, 4 patients with multiple sclerosis and one patient with infection by borrelia have been studied by CT, myelography and/or MR. To gain information on the metabolism of central nervous system disease (CNS), and thus, to improve diagnosis the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was studied in all cases using high-resolution 1H NMR spectroscopy at 360 MHz. Seventeen metabolites could be identified in CSF in addition to the usual clinical chemical parameters. As compared to a control group discrimination of tumors from inflammation was possible by means of different metabolites and/or metabolite concentration. The CSF in disk herniations differed in the concentration of acetate from the control group. In CSF of tumors, multiple sclerosis and of infection by borrelia distinct differences in the concentrations of putrescine, citrate, valine, alpha-alanine, acetate, creatinine, glucose, beta-hydroxy-butyric acid, glutamine and creatine have been observed both as compared directly and in comparison to the control group. Thus, high-resolution 1H NMR spectroscopy of CSF gives speedy information on metabolism, since a variety of metabolites, usually examined only in different tests, can be studied in one single step. Thus, high-resolution 1H NMR spectroscopy supports imaging, especially MR, as morphological changes in diseases may be differentiated by means of different metabolite profiles. This assumption needs further confirmation on a prospective study with a larger patient population.