Journal
CURRENT INFECTIOUS DISEASE REPORTS
Volume 18, Issue 11, Pages -Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11908-016-0545-6
Keywords
Central nervous system infections; Meningitis; Encephalitis; Laboratory diagnosis; Microscopic morphology; Rapid antigen testing; Culture; Serology; Molecular methods; Pan-omic techniques
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Funding
- NCI NIH HHS [P30 CA008748] Funding Source: Medline
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Central nervous system (CNS) infections are potentially life threatening if not diagnosed and treated early. The initial clinical presentations of many CNS infections are nonspecific, making a definitive etiologic diagnosis challenging. Nucleic acid in vitro amplification-based molecular methods are increasingly being applied for routine microbial detection. These methods are a vast improvement over conventional techniques with the advantage of rapid turnaround and higher sensitivity and specificity. Additionally, molecular methods performed on cerebrospinal fluid samples are considered the new gold standard for diagnosis of CNS infection caused by pathogens, which are otherwise difficult to detect. Commercial diagnostic platforms offer various monoplex and multiplex PCR assays for convenient testing of targets that cause similar clinical illness. Pan-omic molecular platforms possess potential for use in this area. Although molecular methods are predicted to be widely used in diagnosing and monitoring CNS infections, results generated by these methods need to be carefully interpreted in combination with clinical findings. This review summarizes the currently available armamentarium of molecular assays for diagnosis of central nervous system infections, their application, and future approaches.
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