Dorta-Contreras A J, Tabío-Valdés E, Tabío-Valdés A, Delgado-Fernández C, Reiber H
Laboratorio Inmunología, Hospital Pediátrico San Miguel, Ciudad Habana, Cuba.
Arq Neuropsiquiatr. 1998 Sep;56(3B):540-4. doi: 10.1590/s0004-282x1998000400004.
Febrile seizures are the commonest acute neurological disorder of early childhood. Studies suggested that febrile seizures are previous acute events from a more serious neurological problem. Due to neuron-specific enolase is generally accepted as a marker for neuropathological processes in the brain, 16 pediatric patients were studied during their first seizures and a year after it. Neuron-specific enolase in cerebrospinal fluid and blood were analysed by an immune enzyme assay. Non pathological neuron-specific enolase values were obtained in both periods in the group of patients. There were no significative differences when paired series statistics test was performed with 95% of confidence. Neuron-specific enolase appears not to be a marker for febrile seizures because its concentration not be increased in cerebrospinal fluid in this group of patients.