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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (bacterial meningitis)
4,038 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The relation of neuraminidase to morbidity and mortality was examined in patients with Haemophilus influenzae, meningococcal, and pneumococcal meningitis. Ten strains of H. influenzae and eight strains of meningococci from infected cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) did not elaborate neuraminidase. Each of 27 strains of pneumococci from infected CSF elaborated both neuraminidase and N-acetylneuraminic acid (NANA) aldolase. There was no correlation between amount of neuraminidase secreted in vitro and survival of patients. Values for free and total NANA concentrations were derived from admission CSF samples of 63 patients with meningitis; 18 patients infected with Neisseria meningitidis, 10 with H. influenzae and 35 with Diplococcus pneumoniae. Mean values for total NANA were elevated in each type of bacterial meningitis; however, abnormal concentrations of free CSF NANA were detected only in 17 patients with pneumococcal meningitis. 11 of 18 patients with pneumococcal meningitis showing normal free CSF NANA concentrations were cured, whereas only 4 patients with abnormal free NANA levels survived without residua. Both coma and bacteremia occurred significantly more often among patients with elevated concentrations of free CSF NANA. The association of elevated concentrations of free CSF NANA with coma and with an adverse prognosis suggested that neuraminidase may be a factor in the pathogenesis of penumococcal meningitis.
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PMID:Neuraminidase activity in bacterial meningitis. 439 34

Bacterial infections are frequent events in premature and newborn infants. The reason is a defective specific and nonspecific defence of bacterial organisms. Some immunoglobulins like IgM and IgA including secretory IgA are absent. Premature infants also show a decreased level of IgG. Cellular immunity is anatomically intact but functionally defective. A number of complement factors are lacking, the activation of the alternative pathway is impaired. Newborn infants with perinatal problems like asphyxia or difficult delivery, show defects of leucocyte function like decreased deformability, defective chemotaxis and defective killing of ingested bacteria. Certain diseases, like hypoxia and malformations of immature organ functions in this age group (decreased acid production in the stomach), facilitate bacterial colonization of surface epithelia and the invasion of tissues. Consequences of these pathogenetic mechanisms are an unimpaired propagation of bacterial organisms into the blood and meninges without localization of the infecting organisms at the entry site. Bacterial meningitis is not considered a separate disease entity but a complication of bacteremia and sepsis. Clinical symptoms are nonspecific at the onset of the infection. Fever is frequently absent; decreased appetite, vomiting, a bloated abdomen, diarrhea, tachycardia, tachypnea are early signs of a bacterial infection, a grey mottled appearance, cyanosis, jaundice, petechiae, apneic spells, seizure activity and a metabolic acidosis are symptoms of advanced infection. Successful treatment at this stage is often not possible. Every sign of a decreased well being of a newborn of premature infant warrants laboratory and bacteriologic work up for septicemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Chemotherapy of severe bacterial infections in pediatrics]. 631 69

Haemophilus influenzae type b is the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in children. Intranasal or intraperitoneal inoculation of infant rats with Haemophilus influenzae type b results in bacteremia and meningitis and has been proved to be a reproductible model of the human disease. For these reasons, it was of interest to use rats as experimental model for the study of anti-Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine. Immune serum against Haemophilus influenzae type b cell surface extracts was prepared on rabbit. In a first experiment, pregnant rats were passively immunized with either immune rabbit serum or normal rabbit serum or saline. In a second experiment, suckling rat mothers were passively immunized with either immune rabbit serum or normal rabbit serum or saline. All infant rats were inoculated intraperitoneally at 6 days of age with Haemophilus influenzae type b. Bacteremia was determined in all infected rats 24 h after challenge. Only infant rats from immune serum-treated mothers were protected. This protection may be transferred from mother to young rat either before of after the birth.
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PMID:[Fetal and neonatal transmission of type-b anti-haemophilus influenzae antibodies protecting the newborn rat]. 634 43

16 bacterial meningitis on 150 observations of purulent meningitis have clear or normal CSM at the initial lumbar puncture. Neisseria meningitidis is the principal germ and there is often purpura and moderate shock. Bacteremia is present in three of the six observations with normal CSF. CSF in controlled a second time 9 to 48 h after the first control. In 14 cases CSF is purulent. Treatment is delayed in eight cases.
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PMID:[Bacterial meningitis with initially clear CSF]. 653 72

Among the numerous causes of prolonged fever of unknown origin, the factitious fevers are frequently considered last after much diagnostic and therapeutic effort. Five observations of factitious fever are presented including 2 cases of thermometer manipulation in men aged 45 and 80. The latter patient is the oldest in whom such a case has been reported. In the first case the prolonged fever led to exploratory laparotomy with splenectomy followed by antilymphoma chemotherapy before the thermometer manipulation was discovered. This patient had previously been treated successfully for stage Ib Hodgkin lymphoma. In the other case hospitalization had lasted several weeks, and much antibiotic and steroid treatment had been administered, before the manipulation was suspected. A third case of thermometer manipulation was observed in a 57-year-old woman who had been presenting with factitious symptoms for over 10 years. Two other cases of factitious fever due to self-induced infections have been observed in two young women aged 23 and 27, both in paramedical professions. These self-induced infections led to polymicrobial bacteremia, exploratory laparotomy and hemicolectomy in one case, and to probable bacterial meningitis in the other. Certain aspects of these cases agree well with the diagnostic criteria of factitious fever described in the literature. We feel it is important to recognize this cause of febrile states, even if there is an apparent etiology, in order to avoid much vain investigation and prolonged hospitalization.
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PMID:[Factitious fevers as a cause of prolonged fevers. Apropos of 5 clinical cases]. 664 32

In an attempt to develop a rational basis for performing lumbar puncture in sepsis workups, the hypothesis was tested that, for each of eight variables with a known association with bacteremia, the frequencies for patients having bacterial meningitis would be significantly greater than those in patients having bacteremia alone. In a one-year period, 168 lumbar punctures were performed in children having a mean age of 7.3 months. Patients were assigned to four groups: bacterial meningitis, bacteremia only, aseptic meningitis, and normal. Mean age, frequencies of symptoms, clinical appearances, ethnic groups, and sex ratio were determined for all groups. Frequencies of eight variables were determined and compared between Groups I and II.Results indicated that frequencies were not significantly different for groups I and II and that lethargy and petechiae, although distinguishing between groups I and IV, did not distinguish among the three groups having serious disease. It was concluded that since one cannot distinguish among groups having serious disease, all such patients suspected of sepsis should undergo lumbar puncture.
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PMID:Should lumbar puncture be routinely performed in patients with suspected bacteremia? 665 17

Before effective vaccines were available, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) was the most common cause of bacterial meningitis among children in the United States. Since the introduction of Hib conjugate vaccines in 1988, the incidence of invasive Hib infection has declined by at least 95% among infants and children (1,2). As part of the Childhood Immunization Initiative (CII), the Public Health Service has included Hib disease among children aged < 5 years as one of the vaccine-preventable diseases targeted for elimination in the United States by 1996 (3). This report summarizes provisional data about invasive Hi disease during 1993-1994 based on information from three surveillance systems: the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS), the National Bacterial Meningitis and Bacteremia Reporting System (NBMBRS), and a multistate laboratory-based surveillance system.
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PMID:Progress toward elimination of Haemophilus influenzae type b disease among infants and children--United States, 1993-1994. 761 49

In AIDS patients, non-typhoid salmonella metastatic abscesses in lung and brain due to bacteremia have been described previously. Here we present a case in which a group B Salmonella, serotype Copenhagen, caused right parietal subdural empyema. The etiologic diagnosis was based on culture of pus obtained from the lesion. The patient was treated for bacterial meningitis and made a good recovery. He is at present reasonably well and is taking ciprofloxacin as prophylaxis against salmonella relapse.
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PMID:Non-typhoid Salmonella subdural empyema in a patient with AIDS. 766 85

Infants rats, a well known model for the experimental reproduction of bacterial meningitis, were used by us to test the protective potential of antibodies developed in humans who had been vaccinated with the Cuban antimeningitis vaccine (VA-MENGOCBC). Newborn rats were inoculated by the intraperitoneal and intranasal routes with suspensions of Neisseria meningitidis group B bacteria. Bacteremia kinetics were evaluated from blood and brain-spinal fluid cultures. Samples of the central nervous system were taken and smears of backbone fluids prepared for histopathologic evaluations. Characterization of bacteremia evolution, as well as the mean lethal dose of germs and histopathologic features, were determined. After standardization of the model, therapeutic schemes were applied using passive immunization pre- and post-infection with N. meningitidis. A significant level of protection was obtained in relation to control animals that received the same challenge doses.
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PMID:Evaluation of the efficacy of human antimeningococcal immunoglobulin G in infant rats experimentally infected with Neisseria meningitidis group B. 785 7

Ninety-five infants, less than 2 months of age, diagnosed as urinary tract infections, from July 1984 to June 1991, were reviewed. Their urinary cultures, obtained either by suprapubic puncture or via catheterization, all had bacterial colony counts of over 10(5)/ml. In this survey, males predominated (91.6%). Fever and gastrointestinal problems were the two most prevalent signs. E. coli was the most common causative organism, and gentamicin was the most effective antibiotic. Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR), the most common anomaly, was found in one-third (25/76) of patients on voiding cystourethrography, with 20% being high grade (Gr. IV or Gr. V). Eleven cases (11%) had bacteremia, and one case had bacterial meningitis. Sixty-seven cases were followed up in our hospital and seven of them had second infections within a year of their first UTI. The mean period between episodes was less than two months. All these patients had urinary tract anomalies and received oral chemoprophylactic drugs for variable lengths of time. Five of the seven recurrences were caused by resistant bacilli. Continuous oral antibiotic prophylaxis and regular follow-up examinations were the rules of prevention for further infection and future renal impairment. These preventive methods are especially important in young infants with UTI.
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PMID:Urinary tract infection in infants less than 2 months of age. 808 50


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