Abstract

The detection of neural-reactive immunoglobulin G (IgG) autoantibodies aids the diagnosis of organ-specific autoimmune neurologic disorders. Many paraneoplastic autoantibodies reliably predict a particular cancer type and are accompanied by varied neurologic presentations of subacute onset.1 The detection of neuromyelitis optica (NMO)–IgG predicts a relapsing inflammatory demyelinating disorder predominated by optic neuritis and transverse myelitis.2 When an autoimmune neurologic disorder is suspected, serologic testing of serum is frequently undertaken before more invasive CSF evaluation. However, CSF evaluation can complement testing of serum when suspicion for an autoimmune etiology persists despite a negative serum result. Here we report, for a 25-year period of testing by standardized indirect immunofluorescence protocols, the frequency of neural autoantibody detection in serum and CSF. ### Methods. The immunofluorescence protocols we used were validated in this laboratory for detection of paraneoplastic antibodies (anti-neuronal nuclear antibody [ANNA]-1; ANNA-2; ANNA-3; Purkinje cell cytoplasmic antibody [PCA]-1; PCA-2; PCA-Tr; collapsin response-mediator protein [CRMP]-5-IgG; amphiphysin antibody; antiglial/neuronal nuclear antibody [AGNA]-1; NMDA receptor antibody) and NMO-IgG. We searched the Mayo Clinic Neuroimmunology Laboratory database (January 1986 to March 2010) for all patient samples …

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