CSF cells in tuberculous meningitis

CSF cells in tuberculous meningitis

Journal 6/the Neurological Sciences, 1981,49:223-228 © Elsevier/North-Holland Biomedical Press 223 CSF CELLS IN TUBERCULOUS MENINGITIS Humoral and C...

248KB Sizes 0 Downloads 51 Views

Journal 6/the Neurological Sciences, 1981,49:223-228 © Elsevier/North-Holland Biomedical Press

223

CSF CELLS IN TUBERCULOUS MENINGITIS Humoral and Cellular Immune Response

S. PELC and E. DE MAERTELAERE

Neurology (Department of Pediatrics) and Cytology (Department of Haematology), University of Brussels, H6pital Saint-Pierre, rue Haute, 1000 Brussels (Belgium) (Received 12 June, 1980) (Revised, received 10 september, 1980) (Accepted 18 September, 1980)

SUMMARY

In 10 patients with tuberculous meningitis both T and B lymphocyte activation was observed in the CSF from clinical onset of disease. During the course of the illness, the humoral response remained most marked, disappearing by 2 months, while the cellular immune response continued for about another 3 months. This contrasts with acute viral meningitis, in which both responses cease within 1-2 weeks of disease.

INTRODUCTION

It is generally acknowledged that in viral and tuberculous meningitis the CSF contains a majority of lymphocytes and that unusual plasma cells may be recognized (Sayk 1960; Olischer and Sayk 1967; P6ter 1967; Mazalton and Lebeau 1970; Guseo 1976; Oehmichen 1976; Schoenen et al. 1976; Glasser et al. 1977). In recent years, however, other abnormal cells have been reported occasionally in the conditions, such as cells in mitosis (Olischer and Sayk 1967; Oehmichen 1976) and "transformed" lymphocytes (also named atypical or reactive lymphocytes or immunocytes) (Mazalton and Lebeau 1970; Gupta 1973; Oehmichen 1976; Schoenen et al. 1976; Glasser et al. 1977) that are now regarded, together with plasmacytes, as part of the process of lymphoid-cell line proliferation and differentiation induced in vivo by antigen stimulation. In a previous light-microscopical study of CSF in viral meningitis and meningoencephalitis (Pelc and De Maertelaere, in press) we have been able to identify such distinctive cells and observe major immune reactivity in plasma cells. The findings were all prominent within the first days of the disease.

224 We have recently had the opportunity to investigate similarly CSF of tuberculous meningitis in 10 proven cases and to disclose qualitatively identical findings But, in contrast to viral infections, they were seen to persist for several months. The CSF findings in tuberculous meningitis are reported and are compared to those in viral disease. So far as we are aware, no detailed morphologic account exists of the immune phenomena in CSF in the course of tuberculous meningitis. MATERIALS AND METHODS

Ten patients, 3 adults and 7 children, with positive Tb bacillus in CSF culture (and with Tb antibiotic therapy) were investigated. In 8 of them, several fluids were examined during the course of disease and in 2 more, both infants, only one sample taken on hospital admission was available. The conventional CSF findings in the 10 cases are summarized in Table 1, with respect to the day of clinical onset of meningitis (day zero). The cell numbers were established by the standard counting chamber method and type percentages, including those of transformed lymphocytes and plasmacytes, were determined on a CSF sediment stained with May-Grfinwald-Giemsa, as previously described (Pelc and De Maertelaere, in press). Other cytomorphological findings relevant to immune reactivity are listed separately in Table 2, also according to clinical disease onset. The data from Table 1 and 2 pertaining to the cell responsiveness in the 10 patients during the course of their disease are grouped and represented in Fig. 1, thus providing an overview of the ranges of immunocompetent lymphocyte manifestations in the CSF cells during the course of Tb meningitis. RESULTS

As seen in Table 1 and Fig. 1, transformed lymphocytes and plasma cells, though each in variable amount, could be observed already on day 2 and were prone to persist up to day 128 and 40, respectively. During this 128-day period, most likely as another sign of both T and B lymphocyte activation, many transformed lymphocytes and some small lymphocytes or plasma cells could be found with evidence of nuclear polylobulation (Table 2 and Fig. 1). Lymphoid cell division (metaphasis or binucleation), as expected in early antigen stimulation, happened to be seen from the very onset of disease and to last for about 1 to 2 months (Table 2 and Fig. 1). In addition to the plain fully mature antibody-secreting cells, seen during the first 40 days, other plasmacytes, in small numbers, with morphologically gammaglobulin increased secretion (+'flaming"), storage (Russell bodies, morular cells) or release (clasmatosis) tended to be found for about the first 2 months of disease (Table 2 and Fig. 1).

225 TABLE 1 L A B O R A T O R Y F I N D I N G S IN T H E CSF

Patients age

Day after onset

Cells/#l

Granulo- L y m p h o - TransPlasmaMonocytes (~o) cytes (~o) formed cytes (I~;) cytes ( ~ ) lymphocytes (/o) o,

1. 6 years

XIV XX XXXVII LXXX XC

376 153 40 30 4

50 38 8 3

36 56 85 90 90

2. 9 years

XIII XVIII XXXVI

157 208 62

3 47

85 30 99

3. 6 months

IIl

300

4. 16 years

XIII XXII XXXVII XXXlX LXVIII

217 280 280 115 310

5. 31 years

XIV XXII XXIX

155 179 106

6. VII 8 m o n t h s XVIII XXVI LIIII XC

6 4 6 7 10 2 12

20

78

3 9 15 4 96

67 54 71 90 2

18 8

5 10 3

84 80 83

40 12 2

38 46 68 93 88

I00 85 150 41 12 76 8

12 3 17

79 90 70 100 96 90 99

70 2 7 5 0.7

7. 52 years

1I XXXXVI XXXXIX LVIII LXXVIII C CXXVIII

8. 3 years

XXIV XXXX LV CIIII

60 47 27 17

20 1

70 80 83 90

9. 8 months

XX

59

4

90

10. 7 months

X XXVII XXXXVI LXXXVI

105 110 85 15

8

87 91 80 69

4

5 23 4 3

18 40 21 7 12

5 16 12 10

3 6 14 31

Protein (mg/dl) (N = 50 mg)

Sugar (mg/dl) CSF/Serum

186 70 58 26 32

25/69 30/62 36/73

144 90 32

32/112 44/95

224

23/85

218 160 218 292 1800

49/179

333 280 230

15/119 20/87 18/72

40 37 10 21 26

47/109

128 245 288 200 138 129 85

48/128 20/95

93 64 52 48

44/81 48/75

112

38/123

144 106 58 43

21/115 33/106

226 TABLE 2 CSF C Y T O M O R P H O L O G I C A L

FINDINGS OF IMMUNE

Patients

Day

Poly-

age

after onset

lobulated nucleus a

Binucleated cells

Cellmitosis

REACTIVITY

" F l a m i n g " Russell plasmabodies in cytes plasmacytes

Morular cells .

_

I. 6 years

XIV XX XXXVII LXXX XC

+ + +

XIII XVIll XXXV1

+

III

+

+

+

Xlll XXII XXXVII XXXIX LXVIII

+ + + + +

+ + + + +

+ + +

XIV XXII XXIX

+ + +

+

+

VII XVIll XXVI LIIII XC

+

+ +

+ + +

+

+

+

+

2. 9 years

3. 6 months

+

4. 16 years

+ +

+ + + + +

+ +

5. 31 y e a r s

+ + +

+ +

+

+

+

6. 8 months

+ +

7. 52 y e a r s

ii XXXXVI XXXXIX LVIII LXXVIII C CXXVIII

+ + + +

-t-

XXIV XXXX LV CIIII

+ + + +

XX

+

+

X XXVI I XXXXVI LXXXVI

+ +

+

+

+ +

8. 3 years

9, 8 months 10. 7 months

+

+

+

+

+

a Was seen more often in transformed lymphocytes than in lymphocytes and plasma cells.

Clasmatosis

227 68

Plasmacyte clasmatosis Morulor -cells

;~

2~2

Plasmacytes with Russell bodies 3

78

i

i

13

"Flaming" plasmacytes

i

Plasmacytes

,2

Binucleated cells

2,

41 i

49

3,9

Mitosis Polylobulated nuclei ~

2

128

128 J

Reactive lymphocytes

6o ~see table 2

15o

150 cloys from onset of diseose

Fig. 1. Ranges of CSF immunocompetent cell responsiveness in the course of tuberculous meningitis.

DISCUSSION

The occurrence in CSF close to the onset of Tb meningitis of plain and highly activated plasma cells was similar in time and quality to that observed in acute viral meningitis (Pelc and De Maertelaere, in press). It may account, in both circumstances, for the marked humoral immune response to antigenic stimulation. However, in contradistinction to viral illness, in which this phenomenon disappeared within less than 2 weeks, in Tb meningitis, it appeared to continue and remain equally intense for as long as 2 months. The second phenomenon in CSF that was found to be common to viral and tuberculous meningitis was that of partition and differentiation of the lymphoid cells from the very onset of disease. But, again, whereas in viral infection the process was seen to come to an end by the first week of disease, in Tb bacillus infection, cell mitosis and plasma cell maturation tended to persist for 6-8 weeks while mainly transformed lymphocytes with either normal or abnormal appearing nuclei could still be observed beyond that period, namely for about 3 further months. Since, admittedly, regular plasma cells are short-lived B lymphocytes and hyperactive ones are end cells, it may reasonably be assumed that most of the cells that continued to develop over the remaining 3 months were actually T lymphocytes. The present cell findings therefore suggest that in the CSF of Tb meningitis

228 the cellular immune response, T-cell mediated, tends to be much more protracted than the humoral, B-cell dependent, response. This differs strikingly from acute viral menigitis in which both responses appear to be of equal and short duration. Perhaps this difference may account t~r the usual course of Tb meningitis. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We are grateful to Dr. R. Denolin-Reubens and Dr. P. Fondu (Department of Haematology) for their support and encouragement and to M.J. Hupin for his skilful technical assistance. REFERENCES Glasser, L., C. Payn e and J.J. Corrigan (1977) The in vivo development of plasma cells, Neurology ( Minneap. ), 27:448-459. Gupta, P. K. (1973) Cytodiagnosis of viral encephalitis, Lancet, i: 609. Guseo, A. (1976) Morpphological signs as indications of function of cells in the cerebrospinal fluid, J. Neurol., 212: 159-170. Mazalton, A. and J. LeBeau (1970) Diagnostic cytologique des m6ningites ~ liquide clair par la technique de Suta. Ann. Mkd. int., 121 : 341 346. Oehmichen, M. (1976) Cerebrospinal Fluid Cytology--An Introduction and Atlas, Thieme, Stuttgart. Olischer, R. M. and J. Sayk (1967) Der Liquor - - Insbesondere Zellbefunde bei Meningitiden, Fortsehr. Neurol. Psychiat., 35: 453-478. Pelc, S. and E. De Maertelaere, CSF of acute viral meningitis and meningoencephalitis - Cytomorphological features of early marked immune stimulation, Europ. Neurol., In press. P6ter, A. (1967) The plasma cells of the cerebrospinal fluid, J. neurol. Sci., 4:227 239. Sayk, J. (1960) Cytologic der Cerebrospinalfliissigkeit, Fischer, Jena. Schoenen, J., N. Einaudi and J. J. Delwaide (1976) Analyse cytologique qualitative du liquide c6phalorachidien, Rev. rn~d. Liege, 31 : 471484.