A marked prozone effect was observed in indirect immunofluorescence with human sera and human cerebrospinal fluid in two clinical cases involving breast carcinoma with paraneoplastic neuronal antibodies, and anti- N-methyl-D-aspartic… Click to show full abstract
A marked prozone effect was observed in indirect immunofluorescence with human sera and human cerebrospinal fluid in two clinical cases involving breast carcinoma with paraneoplastic neuronal antibodies, and anti- N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor antibodies. Anti-Yo antibodies and anti-NMDA antibodies were not detectable under high concentrations (1:10 serum dilution and neat CSF respectively) but showed a true effect when sufficiently diluted at 1:80 and 1:5 respectively. This paper demonstrates that prozone effects have their occurrences in indirect immunofluorescence, and clinicians and laboratory technicians should be wary of its implications during screening of autoantibody markers in neurological diseases.
               
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