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Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry logoLink to Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry
. 1998 Dec;65(6):930–932. doi: 10.1136/jnnp.65.6.930

Jugular venous and arterial concentrations of serum S-100B protein in patients with severe head injury: a pilot study

A Raabe 1, D Menon 1, S Gupta 1, M Czosnyka 1, J Pickard 1
PMCID: PMC2170409  PMID: 9854976

Abstract

The objective of this study was to analyse the temporal course of the jugular venous-arterial gradient of S-100B protein after severe head injury and the correlation between the absolute concentrations of serum S-100B protein and outcome, CT findings, and clinical variables.
 Fifteen patients were included in this pilot study. All patients were treated according to a standard therapy protocol targeted to maintain cerebral perfusion pressure. The serum concentration of S-100 protein was measured daily for five consecutive days after injury by a monoclonal two site immunoluminometric assay. Nine patients showed favourable and six unfavourable outcome after 6 months with a mortality rate of 33% (five patients). The mean gradient between jugular venous and arterial blood was 8.2% (p<0.05). Patients showing an unfavourable outcome had significantly higher jugular venous or arterial S-100 values compared with those with a favourable outcome (jugular venous S-100B 2.78 µg/l v 1.22 µg/l, p<0.05; arterial S-100B 2.48 µg/l v 1.19 µg/l, p<0.05). All patients with an initial or secondary increase in S-100B value of >2 µg/l were found to have an unfavourable outcome. S-100B was found to be an independent predictor of outcome after severe head injury. The persisting increase of S-100B for three to five days even in patients with favourable outcome and no signs of secondary insults might reflect continuing damage to the blood-brain barrier or ongoing glial cell death.



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