Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (bacterial meningitis)
4,038 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Viral meningitis is part of the aseptic meningitis syndrome but must be distinguished from bacterial meningitis on the basis of a careful examination of the CSF and sound clinical judgment. Enteroviruses probably account for the bulk of cases of aseptic meningitis that occur in the United States and which are reported to the Centers for Disease Control each year. The seasonal pattern in the incidence of aseptic meningitis is largely due to the seasonal variation of enteroviral infections. Early on, the CSF in patients with viral meningitis frequently contains a predominance of polymorphonuclear leukocytes and may even have a low glucose level. The presence of neutrophils in the initial CSF sample is especially common in patients with enteroviral infections. A CSF glucose level lower than 50 per cent of a simultaneously drawn blood glucose determination is not uncommon in patients with viral meningitis due to mumps, LCM, and herpes simplex. In a patient with a predominance of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the initial CSF specimen and in whom a viral infection is suspected, antibiotics may be withheld if a spinal tap is repeated within 12 hours. A shift from polymorphonuclear leukocytes to mononuclear cells makes viral meningitis the likely diagnosis. Both herpes simplex and varicella-zoster may infect the meninges by means of spread from cervical and dorsal root ganglia in a retrograde fashion much the way they spread in an antegrade fashion to the skin. HSV-2 is more likely to cause the clinical syndrome of viral meningitis, while HSV-1 is more likely to cause a meningoencephalitis with serious brain dysfunction. The identification of a specific viral agent in body fluids, especially the CSF, in a patient with aseptic meningitis is of more than academic interest, since it can shorten duration of hospital stay and eliminate unnecessary antimicrobial therapy. The diagnosis of enteroviral infections depends upon the isolation of a virus from CSF, stool, or throat plus a fourfold antibody response in the serum to the viral isolate. The 60-odd serotypes of enterovirus, each with different antigenic determinants, preclude serologic testing alone as a useful diagnostic test to identify the patient infected with coxsackievirus or echovirus. For infections, due to herpes simplex, varicella-zoster, LCM, and arboviruses, a serologic test alone can be useful.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Viral meningitis. 399 Apr 41

Brainstem auditory-evoked potential (BAEP) was performed on 101 children with meningitis to assess the incidence of hearing impairment. Fifty-two (51.5%) children had bacterial meningitis, six (5.9%) had viral meningitis, and 43 (42.6%) had aseptic meningitis. Fifty-one (50.5%) patients were assessed before discharge and 50 (49.5%) 9 days to 17 months later (mean = 4 months). BAEP impairment was found in 28 (27.7%) of 101 patients; 24 had sensorineural and four had conductive type of hearing loss, and 17 (60.7%) had unilateral and 11 (39.3%) had bilateral impairment. Hearing threshold was elevated in 22 (21.8%) patients, and the other six had increased latency and interpeak latencies with normal threshold. Frequency of BAEP impairment or hearing loss associated with bacterial meningitis was 34.6% and 30.8%, respectively; frequency associated with aseptic meningitis was 20.9% and 13.9%, respectively. One child with viral meningitis (coxsackie virus) had mild BAEP impairment. Most of the BAEP impairment in the bacterial meningitis group was associated with H. influenzae. Prospective BAEP study was performed in 20 patients randomly at 0.3 to 18 months to assess hearing status after antibiotic treatment, 10 with normal and 10 with abnormal BAEP. All the initially normal BAEP patients remained normal. Of the 10 patients with abnormal BAEP results initially, four returned to normal, two improved, three remained unchanged, and one deteriorated. The incidence of hearing loss after bacterial and aseptic meningitis is high. BAEP is useful to screen for possible hearing loss in children with meningitis, and follow-up BAEP is necessary for those patients with initially abnormal BAEP.
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PMID:Brainstem auditory-evoked potential evaluation in children with meningitis. 974 29