Consensus paper of the WFSBP Task Force on biological markers of dementia: The role of CSF and blood analysis in the early and differential diagnosis of dementia

2005 | review. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Consensus paper of the WFSBP Task Force on biological markers of dementia: The role of CSF and blood analysis in the early and differential diagnosis of dementia​
Wiltfang, J.; Lewczuk, P.; Riederer, P.; Grunblatt, E.; Hock, C.; Scheltens, P.& Hampel, H. et al.​ (2005)
The World Journal of Biological Psychiatry, 6​(2) pp. 69​-84​.​
Taylor & Francis Ltd. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/15622970510029786 

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Authors
Wiltfang, J.; Lewczuk, Piotr; Riederer, Peter; Grunblatt, E.; Hock, C.; Scheltens, Philip; Hampel, Harald; Vanderstichele, Hugo; Iqbal, K.; Galasko, D.; Lannfelt, Lars; Otto, Markus; Esselmann, Herrmann; Henkel, A. W.; Kornhuber, Johannes; Blennow, Kaj
Abstract
Aging of population, and increasing life expectancy result in an increasing number of patients with dementia. This symptom can be a part of a completely curable disease of the central nervous system (e.g, neuro inflammation), or a disease currently considered irreversible (e.g, Alzheimer's disease, AD). In the latter case, several potentially successful treatment approaches are being tested now, demanding reasonable standards of pre-mortem diagnosis. Cerebrospinal fluid and serum analysis (CSF/serum analysis), whereas routinely performed in neuroinflammatory diseases, still requires standardization to be used as an aid to the clinically based diagnosis of AD. Several AD-related CSF parameters (total tau, phosphorylated forms of tau, A beta peptides, ApoE genotype, p97, etc.) tested separately or in a combination provide sensitivity and specificity in the range of 85%, the figure commonly expected from a good diagnostic tool. In this review, recently published reports regarding progress in neurochemical pre-mortem diagnosis of dementias are discussed with a focus on an early and differential diagnosis of AD. Novel perspectives offered by recently introduced technologies, e.g, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) and surface enhanced laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SELDI-TOF MS) are briefly discussed.
Issue Date
2005
Status
published
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Journal
The World Journal of Biological Psychiatry 
ISSN
1562-2975

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