Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026918 (Mycobacterium)
52,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A fatal case of tuberculous meningitis caused by a multiply-resistant tubercle bacillus is described, the first such case from Southeast Asia. Increased efforts to isolate Mycobacterium tuberculosis from the cerebrospinal fluid and determine the extent and pattern of drug resistance are necessary if the high mortality from this disease is to be reduced.
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PMID:Drug resistant tuberculous meningitis in the Philippines: report of a case. 251 44

A case of hydrocephalus secondary to tuberculous meningitis is reported. A 6-month-old baby was admitted to our hospital with a 10-day history of high fever. Neurological examination revealed no abnormal findings other than neck stiffness. Cerebrospinal fluid findings suggested tuberculous meningitis, because of pleocytosis (608/mm3, 100% lymphocytes) and reduced sugar content (19 mg/dl). Mycobacterium tuberculosis was found in cerebrospinal fluid culture. Although anti-tuberculous therapy was administered for 2 weeks, deterioration of consciousness and papilledema appeared. CT scan demonstrated enlargement of the entire ventricular system, indicating communicating hydrocephalus. After a ventricular drainage was performed, consciousness disturbance improved, but the high fever persisted. Judging by cerebrospinal fluid findings, the meningitis seemed to be in the active stage. Therefore an Ommaya reservoir was installed instead of a cerebrospinal fluid shunt for fear of disseminating the tuberculous infection through the shunt tube. However, the hydrocephalus was not well controlled. Consequently, a ventriculoperitoneal shunt was placed, despite the fact that the disease was still active. The fever then gradually subsided, and cerebrospinal fluid findings normalized. The patient was discharged without any neurological deficits one month after emplacement of the ventriculoperitoneal shunt. The antituberculous therapy has been continued, and there is no sign of infection propagated through the shunt 13 months following discharge from the hospital. The result suggests that a cerebrospinal fluid shunt can be placed for hydrocephalus even in the active stage of tuberculous meningitis under antituberculous therapy.
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PMID:[Ventriculoperitoneal shunt for hydrocephalus secondary to tuberculous meningitis: a case report]. 261 8

Fungal and mycobacterial infections are among the most common opportunistic infections in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Candida infections are the bell-wether of progression to symptomatic HIV infection and candida oesophagitis often marks the onset of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). More than 80% of AIDS patients have candida disease. Candida infections remain local and respond to treatment but tend to recur. Cryptococcal infections initially affect few HIV positive patients but involve 10-30% with AIDS. Meningitis is the usual presentation and dissemination is common. Amphotericin usually produces improvement but cure is infrequent, and maintenance therapy is advisable. Mycobacteria cause intracellular infections increasing in parallel with immunodeficiency. Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare is predominant, occurring with other opportunistic pathogens causing systemic and local symptoms with high bacterial density in infected cells. Multidrug treatment is best, but the results are disappointing. Tuberculosis is prevalent in certain groups of patients. It often presents with atypical clinical and pathological features. Anti-tuberculous treatment is effective and prophylaxis should be considered. Endemic fungi with mycobacteria cause sporadic infections. Opportunistic infections are the lethal arm of HIV infection. Diligent diagnosis and persistent treatment offer benefit to HIV-infected patients.
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PMID:Fungal and mycobacterial infections in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. 265 13

Thirty-seven consecutive adults and 2 children with tuberculosis of the nervous system were studied. Twenty-eight patients (72%) had intracranial or intraspinal tuberculomas and only 11 patients (28%) had tuberculous meningitis. Of the 14 patients (36%) with intracranial tuberculomas 6 presented with epilepsy of late onset including convulsive status epilepticus(2). The 6 patients with multiple tuberculomas some of which were situated in the infratentorial compartment were surprisingly free of major neurological disability of systemic disturbance. Thirteen patients (33%) presented with spinal cord compression due to tuberculoma. Eight of these had associated bony abnormalities such as collapsed vertebrae and loss of pedicles usually regarded as characteristic of malignant disease and 2 presented with clinical features of acute transverse myelitis. Eleven patients (28%) had tuberculous meningitis. One of these died, 1 had a protracted illness with gait ataxia and hydrocephalus and 1 other patient was disabled by hemiplegia, dysphasia and epilepsy but the remaining 8 recovered fully. Tuberculosis outside the nervous system was found in 13 patients (33%) in 12 (31%) of whom it was pulmonary. Acid fast bacilli were demonstrated by Ziehl-Neelsen stain in 16 patients (52%) out of 31 from whom specimens were available. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was eventually cultured from only 6 specimens. These data suggest that the clinical and radiological features of tuberculosis of the nervous system in Saudi Arabia may differ substantially from those reported from other countries. In our study there was low morbidity and low fatality rate. Two patients had infratentorial tuberculomas, and 8 patients had bony abnormalities in the vertebral column, typical of malignant disease.
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PMID:Tuberculosis of the nervous system. A clinical, radiological and pathological study of 39 consecutive cases in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 272 75

Cerebrospinal fluid ethionamide concentrations were determined in 18 children (median age 26.5 months) with tuberculous meningitis complicated by raised intracranial pressure. Lumbar spinal fluid specimens were obtained before and after weekly hour-long monitoring of intracranial pressure. Thirty-five paired and four single specimens were evaluated. A dosage schedule of 15 mg/kg was used on 26 occasions, and a spinal fluid ethionamide concentration of 2.5 micrograms/ml, the in vitro minimal inhibitory concentration for Mycobacterium tuberculosis, was exceeded on only seven occasions (27%). A dosage of 20 mg/kg was administered on 13 occasions, and in only two instances (15%) was a concentration of 2.5 micrograms/ml not achieved. Ethionamide in a single daily dosage of 20 mg/kg should be considered for the initial treatment of tuberculous meningitis when the presence of isoniazid-resistant M. tuberculosis cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of ethionamide in children with tuberculous meningitis. 276 11

Tuberculostearic acid, a structural component of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, was identified by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry with selected ion monitoring in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from 13 patients with proven and 8 out of 9 patients with suspected tuberculous meningitis; the negative result was in a patient whose symptoms and CSF abnormalities may have been due to systemic lupus erythematosus. Tuberculostearic acid was found in the CSF of only 1 patient out of 87 with non-tuberculous meningitis or non-infectious disorders; the single false-positive result was probably caused by intrathecal treatment with amikacin. Other aminoglycosides and antituberculous drugs did not interfere with the assay. In serial CSF samples from patients with tuberculous meningitis tuberculostearic acid was still present after 8 months of continuous supervised chemotherapy. Detection of tuberculostearic acid in CSF is a rapid, sensitive, and specific test for tuberculous meningitis, and can be used for retrospective diagnosis in patients who have been started on therapy.
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PMID:Diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis by detection of tuberculostearic acid in cerebrospinal fluid. 288 96

In developing countries tuberculous meningitis is a difficult infection to differentiate from other central nervous system (CNS) infections. This paper presents the history, physical findings, laboratory data, and clinical course of 100 patients who were admitted to a special ward and had CSF cultures positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Fifty-four patients were comatose when admitted and 76 had meningeal signs. Mean admission CSF values were WBC 531, glucose 23 mg/dl, and protein 166 mg/dl. Only two CSF AFB smears were positive. Sixty-one percent of the chest X-rays taken were consistent with pulmonary tuberculous and 39% were normal. Twenty-four patients died within the first week after admission, before the clinical diagnosis was made and anti-tuberculous therapy could be started. Fifty-three of 76 patients given antituberculous therapy died. Neurologic sequelae developed in 48% of the survivors. The high mortality and morbidity rates in this patient-group were due to the severity of illness on admission and the predominance of children (54%).
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PMID:Tuberculous meningitis--clinical and laboratory review of 100 patients. 308 28

A sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed for its potential utility in the detection of antigen in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with tuberculous meningitis. Cerebrospinal fluids examined included those from untreated (group Ia) and treated (group Ib) Mycobacterium tuberculosis meningitis, nonseptic central nervous conditions (group II) such as epilepsy, viral meningitis, and tetany, and nonmycobacterial septic meningitis (group III). The average levels of antigens determined and percent positive specimens, respectively, for each group were (group): Ia, 1.8 micrograms/ml and 75% positive; Ib, 0.37 microgram/ml and 36% positive; II, 0.036 microgram/ml and 100% negative; and III, 0.075 microgram/ml and 100% negative. The system developed employed hyperimmune polyclonal antibody raised against M. tuberculosis and Mycobacterium bovis BCG in burros and rabbits. Cross-reactivity by other mycobacterial species was very low; e.g., 5% for M. kansasii and less than 2% for M. intracellulare, M. avium, M. vaccae, and M. fortuitum. The test shows promise as a specific adjunct for the early diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis.
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PMID:Sensitivity and specificity of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in the detection of antigen in tuberculous meningitis cerebrospinal fluids. 308 70

A number of different biochemical and serological tests have been described recently for the early and accurate diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis. None of these tests has yet gained widespread acceptance in clinical medicine or in microbiology laboratories. To investigate this problem we evaluated adenosine deaminase activity (ADA), an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) that detects antibody to antigen 5 of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and the radioactive bromide partition test (BPT) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Cerebrospinal fluid specimens from children with tuberculous, pyogenic, and viral meningitis as well as from patients with pulmonary tuberculosis without meningitis and from controls with normal CSFs were included inn the study. In addition, we estimated ADAs in serum samples from selected children in these groups. The sensitivity and specificity of the three tests evaluated in the CSF were: ADA assay 73% and 71%; BPT 92% and 92%; and ELISA for antibody to antigen 5, 53% and 90%, 40% and 94%, and 27% and 100%, respectively, at tires of more than or equal to 1:20, 1:40, and 1:80. The serum ADA was lower (11.0 +/- 6.15 IU/l) in children with tuberculous meningitis when compared with those with pulmonary tuberculosis alone (25.8 +/- 20.9 IU/l). The BPT was found to be the most reliable test in the early differentiation of tuberculous from other causes of meningitis and remained abnormal for a period of up to five months after the beginning of treatment. Accordingly, we believe that the BPT should be used in conjunction with bacterial and fungal antigen detection systems for the initial differentiation of clinically suspicious tuberculous meningitis from Gram or culture negative cases, or both, of bacterial and fungal meningitis.
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PMID:Evaluation of adenosine deaminase activity and antibody to Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen 5 in cerebrospinal fluid and the radioactive bromide partition test for the early diagnosis of tuberculosis meningitis. 308 96

A biotin-avidin radioimmunoassay for detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen has been developed. The assay involves sandwiching mycobacterial antigens from sonicate preparations and cerebrospinal fluids between two antibodies produced in burros and rabbits. The reaction is amplified by using biotinylated antibody to rabbit IgG and 125I-labeled avidin. The assay has a sensitivity of 20 ng/ml and shows less than 5% cross-reactivity with six other mycobacteria. We studied patients with untreated tuberculous meningitis, patients with treated tuberculous meningitis, patients with nonbacterial meningitis, and patients with bacterial meningitis. Antigen was detectable in two of 56 control samples (40 ng/ml). Hence, samples with greater than or equal to 80 ng of antigen/ml were considered positive. In patients with untreated tuberculous meningitis, antigen levels ranged from 20 to 10,000 ng/ml, and 15 (79%) of 19 samples were positive. In the treated group, only two (10%) of 17 samples were positive. This test promises to be a rapid adjunct in the early diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis.
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PMID:Radioimmunoassay for detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen in cerebrospinal fluids of patients with tuberculous meningitis. 310 28


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