1992
DOI: 10.1016/0009-8981(92)90089-9
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Organic acids in post-mortem cerebrospinal fluid

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…After death, the concentrations of most acids increased and eight additional metabolites, not observed in CSF from live infants, became detectable. For three of them, malate, lactyllactate and uracil, concentrations increased with the delay of sampling after death (Coude and Kamoun 1992).…”
Section: Reference Values For Organic Acids In Csfmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…After death, the concentrations of most acids increased and eight additional metabolites, not observed in CSF from live infants, became detectable. For three of them, malate, lactyllactate and uracil, concentrations increased with the delay of sampling after death (Coude and Kamoun 1992).…”
Section: Reference Values For Organic Acids In Csfmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…It was not until small, easy-to-use bench-top mass spectrometers became available that organic acids in CSF could be studied more systematically. Recently, organic acid profiles in CSF have been investigated in the framework of a protocol designed to establish the frequency of inborn errors of metabolism in SIDS (Divry et al 1990;Coude et al 1991;Coude and Kamoun 1992). In these studies only four organic acids were constantly found in control CSFs, namely 2-hydroxybutyrate, 3-hydroxybutyrate, palmitate and stearate.…”
Section: Reference Values For Organic Acids In Csfmentioning
confidence: 99%