Serum neuron-specific enolase, prolactin, and creatine kinase after epileptic and psychogenic non-epileptic seizures.
2004
Purpose – To evaluate the discriminative power of serial, simultaneous determinations of serum neuron-specific enolase (NSE), prolactin (PRL) and creatine kinase (CK) in differentiating psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES) from epileptic seizures (ES).
Methods – Prospective measurement of the three markers after 44 single seizures (32 ES and 12 PNES) during continuous video-EEG monitoring at seven different sampling points.
Results – Patients with ES had a significantly greater increase in PRL at 10, 20, 30 min, 1 and 6 h. The sensitivity for elevated NSE and CK was low. PRL showed a higher sensitivity. However, the corresponding positive predictive value was lower than in CK and NSE. Additionally, PRL had the lowest specificity of all parameters.
Conclusions – The limited discriminative power of PRL, CK, and NSE calls into question if these markers are helpful in differentiating PNES and ES.
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