Abstract

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) markers provide useful information about the extent of brain damage. These biochemical indices may also be used when postmortem histopathological examination does not confirm antemortem brain insult. Seven biochemical parameters--creatine kinase (CK), creatine kinase BB isoenzyme (CK-BB), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), gamma-glutamyltransferase, aldolase, leucine aminopeptidase (LAP), and neuron-specific enolase (NSE)--were analyzed in CSF from 82 cadavers. Case studies were categorized into one of four diagnostic groups. There were 15 cases of head trauma, 23 of hypoxia (hangings, carbon monoxide, and drug poisonings), 23 sudden cardiac death, and 21 miscellaneous cases. The degree of craniocerebral trauma was graded. In CSF there was a statistically significant correlation between the severity of craniocerebral trauma and levels of CK, CK-BB, aldolase, LDH, and LAP. CSF CK-BB [median U/L (range)] for the groupings of head trauma, hypoxia, sudden cardiac death, and miscellaneous were, respectively, 873 (1-12,100), 26 (2-2,780), 16 (1-42), and 18 (0-2,780). Corresponding CSF CK levels were 9,370 (28-67,842), 101 (18-36,840), 180 (10-29,622), and 264 (17-26,556). There were no statistical significant differences among the NSE concentrations in the four diagnostic groups. The testing of biochemical markers could be a reliable indicator of the degree of brain insult in support of morphological studies.

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