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Specific anti-beta tubulin antibodies in differential diagnosis of dementias


Authors: D. Škoda 1;  J. Hort 1;  M. Vyhnálek 1;  L. Glosová 1;  M. Mináriková 1;  P. Jinoch 2;  K. Kranda 3;  M. Bojar 1
Authors‘ workplace: Neurologická klinika, 2. LF UK a FN Motol, Praha 1;  VIDIA s. r. o., Jesenice u Prahy 2;  Charité Universitätsmedizin, Berlin 3
Published in: Cesk Slov Neurol N 2007; 70/103(2): 152-157
Category: Original Paper

Overview

The aim:
To elucidate whether primarily atrophic degenerative affection can be differentiated from the affection of vascular origin by examining antibodies against fragments of the neuronal cytoskeleton in patients with dementia.

Methods:
A set of 37 patients with a syndrome of dementia involved 8 patients with Alzheimer´s disease (AD), 8 patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), 11 patients with vascular dementia (VD), and 10 patients with mixed dementia (MD). A control set consisted of 10 subjects without disturbed cognitive functions. The diagnosis was established by means of basic clinical examinations, evaluations of MRI and of laboratory methods (determination of phospho-tau protein, tau protein, beta-amyloid in the cerebrospinal fluid). The serums and cerebrospinal fluids (CSF) of these patients were examined using ELISA method for the presence of specific antibodies against the neuronal cytoskeleton, microtubular subunit – beta-tubulin (btcIII).

Results:
In the sets of patients with dementia the levels of IgM antibodies both in CSF and serum did not differ statistically significantly from those in the controls. Positive titres of IgG anti-btcIII antibodies in CSF were shown in 56% patients with VD, in 33% patients with MD, and in 25% patients with FTLD. Positive titres of IgG antibodies against btcIII in serum were revealed in 40% patients with MD, in 36% patients with VD, and in 13% patients with FTLD. No positive result of IgG antibodies in serum as well as in CSF was recorded in a set of patients with AD and in controls.

Conclusion:
Positive titres of antibodies of IgG class against btcIII in serum and CSF were detected in patients with VD and MD in contrast to patients with AD. After verifying the results in a larger set of subjects, the examination of these specific antibodies can make the differential diagnosis of AD, MD and VD more accurate.

Key words:
Alzheimer´s disease, anti-btcIII antibodies, apoptosis, frontotemporal lobar degeneration, markers of dementia, necrosis, mixed dementia, vascular dementia.


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Labels
Paediatric neurology Neurosurgery Neurology

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Czech and Slovak Neurology and Neurosurgery

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2007 Issue 2

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