Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy metabolomics in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension to identify markers of disease and headache

Olivia Grech, Senali Seneviratne, Zerin Alimajstorovic, Andreas Yiangou, James Mitchell, Thomas Smith, Susan Mollan, Gareth Lavery, Christian Ludwig, Alex Sinclair

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Abstract

Background and Objective: We evaluated the metabolomic profile in CSF, serum and urine of participants with idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) compared to controls and measured changes in metabolism associated with clinical markers of disease activity and treatment.

Methods: A case-control study compared women aged 18-55 years with active IIH (Friedman diagnostic criteria), to a sex, age and body mass index matched control group. IIH participants were identified from neurology and ophthalmology clinics from National Health Service hospitals and underwent a prospective intervention to induce disease remission through weight loss with re-evaluation at 12 months. Clinical assessments included lumbar puncture, headache, papilledema and visual measurements. Spectra of CSF, serum and urine metabolites were acquired utilizing proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

Results: Urea was lower in IIH (CSF; controls median ±IQR 0.196 ±0.008, IIH 0.058 ±0.059, p
Discussion: We observed metabolic disturbances that are evident in CSF, serum and urine of IIH participants, suggesting global metabolic dysregulation. Altered ketone body metabolites normalized following therapeutic weight loss. CSF:serum urea ratio was altered which may influence ICP dynamics and headache. Elevated CSF acetate, known to stimulate trigeminal sensitization, was associated with headache morbidity. These alterations of metabolic pathways specific to IIH provide biological insight and warrants mechanistic evaluation.
Original languageEnglish
JournalNeurology
Early online date8 Sept 2022
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 8 Sept 2022

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