PMID: 7547377Apr 1, 1995Paper

Anticardiolipin-antibodies in stroke and in other neurological disorders

Romanian Journal of Neurology and Psychiatry = Revue Roumaine De Neurologie Et Psychiatrie
L Perju-DumbravaL Deecke

Abstract

Anticardiolipin antibodies (ACL-A) are acquired antiphospholipid antibodies characteristically found in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus or related autoimmune diseases. Several reports have shown that there may be an association between ACL-A and various neurological disorders, in particular cerebral ischemia. Using a micropin enzyme linked immunosorbent assay we measured the levels of ACL-A in the sera of 225 unselected patients with various neurological disorders. The prevalence of ACL-A in the whole group was 4.0% (9/225). However, the prevalence in patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disorders was 9.1% (5/55). With one exception (thrombocytopenia was found more often in ACL-A-positive cases) there was no difference with respect to the prevalence of risk factors for stroke and associated diseases between ACL-A-positive and ACL-A-negative patients with TIA/stroke. High titers of ACL-A were also found in a few patients with epilepsy (n = 2), migraine (n = 1), and intracranial meningioma (n = 1). In patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disorders search for ACL-A may help to identify patients with a possibly higher risk of thrombosis.

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