1. Cytokine biomarkers associated with clinical cases of acute flaccid myelitis.
- Author
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Weldon WC, Zhao K, Jost HA, Hetzler K, Ciomperlik-Patton J, L Konopka-Anstadt J, and Steven Oberste M
- Subjects
- Biomarkers metabolism, Central Nervous System Viral Diseases blood, Central Nervous System Viral Diseases cerebrospinal fluid, Central Nervous System Viral Diseases epidemiology, Child, Enterovirus isolation & purification, Enterovirus Infections diagnosis, Enterovirus Infections epidemiology, Humans, Myelitis blood, Myelitis cerebrospinal fluid, Myelitis epidemiology, Neuromuscular Diseases blood, Neuromuscular Diseases cerebrospinal fluid, Neuromuscular Diseases epidemiology, Picornaviridae Infections diagnosis, Picornaviridae Infections epidemiology, Rhinovirus isolation & purification, United States epidemiology, Central Nervous System Viral Diseases diagnosis, Cytokines metabolism, Myelitis diagnosis, Neuromuscular Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) is a serious neurological illness first recognized in the United States in 2014, with subsequent outbreaks every two years. Following extensive etiologic testing by multiple laboratories of hundreds of specimens collected from patients diagnosed with AFM, no consistent cause of AFM has been identified. However, viruses, including enteroviruses, have been implicated through detection in non-sterile site specimens and antibody studies. Cytokines and chemokines play important roles in the modulation of the innate and adaptive immune response to pathogens. In the current study, we measured levels of cytokines and chemokines in serum and CSF collected from confirmed AFM patients and non-AFM control patients, to identify unique biomarkers as potential hallmarks of AFM pathogenesis. Analysis of ratios of cytokines and chemokines in the CSF compared to the serum indicate that the pro-inflammatory cytokines/chemokines IP-10 and IL-6 were significantly elevated in AFM patients compared to non-AFM patients. These results may provide additional insight into potential etiologies, pathogenic mechanisms, and treatments for AFM., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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