Intrathecal polyspecific immune response to neurotropic viruses in multiple sclerosis: a comparative report from Cuban patients

Abstract
Intrathecal measles(M)- rubella(R)- and varicella zoster(Z)-antibody synthesis in German and Cuban multiple sclerosis (MS) patients are compared considering the different rubella epidemiology in the tropics. Twenty-three Cuban MS patients with a representative age distribution and gender ratio like the group of 177 German MS patients were analysed for albumin, IgG, IgA IgM, oligoclonal IgG and MRZ- antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum. Cuban MS patients show similar CSF data patterns like German patients and high frequencies of intrathecal measles- (78/78%) and varicella zoster- (59/55%) antibody synthesis correspondingly. A lower frequency of intrathecal rubella antibody synthesis (rubella-AI >or= 1.5) in Cuban patients (30%, gender ratio of increased rubella - AI m:f = 1:6) compared with German patients (60%, m:f = 1:1.8) is explained by low incidence of rubella infections in Cuba. Only about 10% of the male population (not immunized before 1986, in contrast to females) had rubella antibodies compared to at least 60% in a European male population, representing the relation of increased rubella-AI in male MS patients. In MS the frequency of intrathecal antibody synthesis is limited by the fraction of seropositives in the population. Natural infection or vaccination are a necessary and equivalent precondition contributing to the arguments against microorganisms as a cause of MS.