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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
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A case of deep-seated brain abscess that ruptured twice into the ventricle and resulted in death is presented. A 45-year-old man had experienced pyrexia and headache for 3 days before admission. On admission he was somnolent (GCS: 13) but there were no abnormal neurological findings except nuchal rigidity and Kernig's sign. Computed tomography (CT) scan showed a ring enhanced mass near the left caudate head and dilated ventricles. In comparison with CT performed at the former hospital it was diagnosed that a rupture into the ventricle of the brain abscess had occurred. Ventricular drainage was performed at once and white purulent cerebrospinal fluid was obtained. Thereafter, he was treated with some antibiotics and his conditions seemed to stabilize for a while. Serial CT images demonstrated that the size of the abscess seemed to be enlarging. Just when we planned to undertake stereotactic aspiration, the second ventricular rupture occurred and he died. According to this case, it is suggested that once a deep-seated brain abscess near the ventricular system is suspected, it should be aspirated by means of CT-guided stereotactic surgery immediately.
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PMID:[A case of brain abscess of the basal ganglia which resulted in disastrous outcome due to ventricular ruptures]. 816 7

Headache, nuchal rigidity, positive Kernig's sign, and even convulsions may be observed during severe bacterial infections such as pneumonia, pyelonephritis, typhoid fever, and bacillary dysentery. In such cases, meningitis can be excluded only by documentation of normal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The authors describe four children with lobar pneumonia in whom the clinical signs of meningeal irritation were associated with a mild increase in the white blood cell count in the CSF (pleocytosis) although there was no other evidence of meningeal infection.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis in children with pneumonia but lacking evidence of meningitis. 834 51

A 40-year-old male with no history of underlying disease was admitted to Hokusho Central Hospital on May 25, 1991, complaining of high fever and headache. Physical examination on admission revealed a temperature of 38.5 degrees C, a pulse rate of 84 beat/min (relative bradycardia) and no abnormal findings for the chest or abdomen. Slight neck stiffness without Kernig's sign was observed at neurological examination. Laboratory data were: ESR 11 mm/lh, WBC 12000/mm3, C-reactive protein positive. Lumbar puncture showed an initial pressure of 230 mmH2O; CSF revealed a cell count of 2633/3 mm3 with mononuclear pleocytosis, total protein of 76 mg/dl and sugar of 54 mg/dl (CSF:blood glucose ratio 0.47). We initially suspected tuberculous or cryptococcal meningitis, but Campylobacter fetus subsp. fetus (C. fetus) was isolated from the CSF and venous blood on the 27th hospital day. IPM/CS 1 g/day, MINO 200 mg/day and FOM 4 g/day were intravenously administered. This antibiotic therapy was very effective: the patient was soon afebrile, and gradually all signs and symptoms were resolved. C. fetus was sensitive to IMP/CS, MINO, KM, GM, EM, OFLX, CP. The patient was discharged with no complication. He has eaten raw beef frequently before admission, but stool culture for C. fetus was negative.
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PMID:[A case of Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus meningitis]. 845 Feb 75

Patients suffering from vascular disease are often a challenge for the acute pain service. Ischaemia, impaired wound healing, stump and phantom limb pain often require a complex analgesic regimen. Invasive measures such as spinal or epidural catheters can be very helpful but carry the risk of infection, as shown by this case report. A 53-year-old woman with a ten-year history of diabetes developed arterial vascular disease. Her right lower leg had been amputated two years previously. She was now admitted with necroses of the left forefoot. A bypass operation was performed under general anaesthesia. Because of intractable ischaemic pain, she was provided with an epidural catheter by the acute pain service. The bypass occluded, however, and a few days later her left lower leg also had to be amputated, this operation being performed under epidural anaesthesia with bupivacaine. The catheter was subsequently used for postoperative pain control and as a means to prevent phantom limb pain. When signs of superficial catheter infection were noticed days later, the catheter was immediately removed. Intractable pain then developed in the left leg which could not be sufficiently controlled with opioids and NSAIDs, and so a second epidural catheter was inserted one segment rostrally. Several days later the infected vascular prosthesis had to be removed followed by amputation of the thigh, this operation also being performed in epidural anaesthesia. Eleven days after insertion of the first epidural catheter, the patient complained of low back pain and headache. Examination by a neurologist revealed no signs of intraspinal infection. The second epidural catheter dislocated at this point in time and it was decided to introduce a third one, this being the only means to treat the otherwise intractable stump pain. Ten days later meningism, Kernig's sign and leucocytosis developed. NMR tomography detected intraspinal fluid in the epidural space at the dorsal border of the spinal canal. A hemilaminectomy was performed. The spinal epidural space showed signs of inflammation of the adipose tissue, but no pus. A little necrotic material and residues of an old haematoma were removed and the epidural space was lavaged. Specimens taken from the epidural material revealed colonisation with staphylococcus epidermidis, which was sensitive to the broad spectrum antibiotics formerly given to the patient to treat the infection in the left stump. By the next day, all signs of epiduritis had disappeared and the patient recovered completely.
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PMID:[Epiduritis after long-term pain therapy with an epidural catheter--review of the literature with a current case report]. 932 67

A 39-year-old female, who had splenectomy for idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) in 1988, was admitted to our hospital with high fever, headache, and loss of consciousness on November 29,1997. Neck stiffness and Kernig's sign were present. Examination of cerebrospinal fluid showed pleocytosis up to 506 cells/mm3 with 89% of polymorphonuclear cells and elevated protein to 1,135 mg/dl, and absence of glucose, Streptococcus pneumoniae phagocytosis was detected in the fluid. We diagnosed her as having pneumococcal meningitis as overwhelming postsplenectomy infection (OPSI) syndrome. After administration of dexamethasone (8 mg/day), cefotaxime (4 g/day), and ampicillin (6 g/day), she survived without any complications. Splenectomized patients have been recognized as immunocompromized hosts, and carry high morbidity and mortality risk from fulminant bacterial infections. Therefore, emergency treatment is important to reduce high mortality in such infections. We present an adult case of OPSI syndrome which occurred as pneumococcal meningitis, and we would like to emphasize the importance of prompt use of corticosteroids and high dose of sensitive antibiotics before DIC may occur during the course of illness.
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PMID:[A survival case of fulminant pneumococcal meningitis as overwhelming postsplenectomy infection (OPSI) syndrome]. 1034 48

Adult cases of viral meningitis caused by echovirus type 13 (E13) were studied. E13 was isolated from 8 of 11 adult patients (73%) with viral meningitis between April and September 2002 in Fukui Prefecture. The mean age was 27.4 +/- 6.4 years (4 males and 4 females). The disease was prevalent among adults, especially younger adults as well as children. The symptoms and signs were as follows; headache (100%), fever (100%), nausea and/or vomiting (88%), Kernig's sign (88%), and increased deep tendon reflexes (50%). The average cell counts in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were 118 +/- 111/mm3. Of the 2 patients, polynuclear cells were dominant during the early phase of the disease. The prognosis was good. Since May 2002, the number of patients with viral meningitis caused by E13 has rapidly increased. Most of the reported patients were children. We should consider the possibility of E13 infection as a cause of adult viral meningitis.
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PMID:[Adult cases of viral meningitis caused by echovirus type 13]. 1450 58

The purpose of this report is to describe the bacteriological features, clinical signs and therapeutic outcome of 148 cases of W135 meningococcus meningitis observed during meningitis outbreaks in Burkina Faso in 2002 and 2003. Diagnosis was based on microbiological study of cerebrospinal fluid. Cases of meningococcus meningitis were recorded throughout the study period with the peak number of cases occurring around the 14th week. There was a slight male predominance (56.1%) and young patients between one and 15 years accounted for 81.7% of cases. The mean interval between onset of symptoms and hospitalization was 2.6 days and the mean duration of hospitalization was 5.5 days. The most common clinical signs were fever (98.6%), stiff neck (90.5%),Brudzinski's sign (85.1%),Kernig's sign (66.2%), altered consciousness (41.9%), vomiting (36.5%) and headaches (34.5%). In most cases treatment with a singie dose of chiorazuphenicol in oil was curative. Overall mortality was 15.5% idth no correlation with sex or age. Seventeen of the 23 deaths occurred within 24 hours after their admission to the hospital. The other six deaths occurred on the second day after admission inS cases and fifth day in one case. Convulsions, shock and altered consciousness were consistent poor prognostic signs. A correlation was found between mortality and interval for hospitalization with better survival in patients receiving prompt treatment. Study of the susceptibility of 102 samples showed that W135 meningococcus was sensitive to penicillin G, ampicillin,ceftriaxone and chloramphenicol but resistant to sulfamides (cotrimoxazole). Bacterial meningitis is an Important factor of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Our findings indicate that the bacteriological, clinical and epidemiological characteristics of W135 meningococcus is do not differ greatly from those of meningococcus A. Since W135 meningitis is susceptible to antibiotics used to cure meningitis, campaigns to promote early detection and treatment must be continued.
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PMID:[W135 meningococcus meningitis: study of 148 cases observed in 2002 and 2003 at the National Teaching Hospital of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso]. 1677 36

At present, both migraine and tension-type headaches in children are believed to be chronic primary headaches. Meningeal signs in both cases are ignored or not examined, and the neurologic status is considered normal. This is the first study that focuses on meningeal signs in children with chronic headaches. The study population comprised 1738 patients aged 5 to 17 years who were examined in an outpatient neurologic clinic over a 6-year period. Particular attention was paid to examination of meningeal signs, including nuchal rigidity, Kernig's sign, Brudzinski's three signs (upper, middle, and lower), the "tripod" sign, and Guillain's and facial signs; the presence of these signs was regarded as meningismus syndrome. Some meningeal signs were found in 12% of 1007 children suffering from migraine, whereas 97% of 731 children with tension-type headaches had the whole set of meningeal signs. This suggested that meningismus is the major clinical syndrome in chronic tension-type headaches in children and adolescents. Chronic mild sterile (possibly autoimmune) inflammation of meninges (dura mater) can be caused by a preceding infection, as well as minor trauma of the head and/or back. Prolonged rest in a recumbent position usually resulted in relief or complete disappearance of both headache and meningeal signs. Monitoring of the meningeal signs is helpful for evaluation of the patient's condition in the course of treatment.
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PMID:Meningismus is a commonly overlooked finding in tension-type headache in children and adolescents. 1690 50

We report carotid ultrasonographic findings in moyamoya disease. A 44-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of fever, headache and nausea. Neurological examination showed neck stiffness and Kernig's sign but he was otherwise normal. Brain computed tomography showed hemorrhage in the right thalamus and the lateral ventricle. Conventional carotid ultrasonography (CCU) detected marked narrowing of the right internal carotid artery (ICA) at the proximal portion without arteriosclerosis, which fulfilled the criteria of bottle neck sign, namely, the ratio of diameter of proximal portion of ICA to that of the distal portion of common carotid artery (CCA) was less than 0.5. Additionally, CCU as well as transoral carotid ultrasonography (TOCU) showed the diameter of the ICA to be smaller than that of the external carotid artery (ECA) (diameter reversal sign). These signs strongly suggested moyamoya disease. Cerebral angiography confirmed the occlusions of intracranial ICA and moyamoya vessels. Bottle neck sign and diameter reversal sign of the carotid artery on carotid ultrasonography are useful for the early detection of moyamoya disease.
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PMID:[Usefulness of carotid ultrasonography for the early detection of moyamoya disease]. 1771 Aug 90

A 32-year-old homosexual man was admitted because of acute headache, fever, and lymphoadenopathy. The neurological examination revealed nuchal rigidity and positive Kernig's sign. The cell count of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) at the time of admission, however, was four per microliter and subsequently increased up to 31 per microliter in three days. The serum antibody for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was positive in ELISA and the cell number of CD4 positive population decreased to 280. The RT-PCR for HIV RNA was 7.6 x 10(5) copies per milliliter, which gradually decreased, leading to the diagnosis of meningitis due to HIV itself. The Western blotting for HIV antibodies were positive for p24, p40 and p55, whereas that for gp 41 was negative in serum and CSF, suggesting that the meningitis occurred during the seroconversion in this patient. We surmise that aseptic meningitis during HIV primary infection usually results in mild CSF pleocytosis and sometimes leads to even normocytosis shown as in this patient, probably because cellular immunity is temporally suppressed in acute HIV infection.
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PMID:[CSF normocytosis in meningitis due to primary infection of human immunodeficiency virus]. 1934 74


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