Abstract

Blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 30 Fisher grade 3 aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (ASAH) patients were analyzed for the presence of the phosphorylated axonal form of the major neurofilament subunit NF-H (pNF-H), a promising biomarker of axonal injury. Patient demographic data including development of vasospasm and outcome scores at 6 months after aneurysmal rupture (AR) were evaluated. Higher pNF-H blood levels in the first few days after AR were strongly predictive of a negative outcome. Blood pNF-H levels in most recovering patients showed a steady increase into the second week after AR, presumably reflecting axonal degeneration secondary to the original insult. Almost half of the patients studied showed sudden dramatic peaks of pNF-H protein release into CSF in the 3- to 14-day time period after AR, which must reflect profound, coordinated, and secondary loss of axons. Patients in whom vasospasm was detected had significantly more pNF-H in both blood and CSF compared with those in whom vasospasm was not detected. We conclude that the analysis of pNF-H levels in blood and CSF differentiates between patients with poor and favorable outcomes and also reveals several novel features of ASAH progression and recovery.

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