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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (
bacterial meningitis
)
4,038
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 29-year-old woman, who was diagnosed as
Crouzon syndrome
for which two cranio-facial surgeries had been performed as a child and at the age of 19, developed high fever, headache, and confusion for two days. She was admitted to our hospital. She was diagnosed as
bacterial meningitis
by cerebrospinal fluid examinations, and her condition was immediately improved by antibiotics. At the age of 23, she also suffered from
bacterial meningitis
caused by otitis media and sinusitis, and recovered by antibiotics with no sequela. Her cranial computed tomography showed sphenoid and ethmoid sinusitis, and bone deformation and hypertrophy with no fistula connecting intracranial space and sinus. Dead space by cranio-facial surgeries might cause the development of chronic or recurrent sinusitis leading to
bacterial meningitis
. Our patient is the second case of recurrent
bacterial meningitis
with
Crouzon syndrome
to our knowledge. We should recognize that recurrent sinusitis with
Crouzon syndrome
after cranio-facial surgery is a risk of recurrent meningitis.
...
PMID:[Recurrent bacterial meningitis in a case of Crouzon syndrome after craniofacial surgery]. 1809 1
The prevalence of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae (PRSP) meningitis has increased worldwide, particularly in East Asia and the United States. We recently experienced a case of PRSP meningitis that developed during frontofacial distraction. The patient was a 7-year-old girl with
Crouzon disease
who was treated by frontofacial monobloc/Le Fort IV minus glabellar osteotomy with quadruple internal distraction devices. Penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis was diagnosed after surgery and treated successfully with meropenem (a carbapenem) at 120 mg kg d every 8 hours, ceftriaxone (a third-generation cephalosporin) at 100 mg kg d every 12 hours, and vancomycin (a glycopeptide) at 45 mg kg d every 6 hours. This case indicates that severe and fatal
bacterial meningitis
may occur as a postoperative complication due to multidrug-resistant bacteria indigenous to the nasal cavity after simultaneous osteotomy of the cranium and facial bone in intracraniofacial surgery, such as that for syndromic craniosynostosis and hypertelorbitism. In such cases, preventive strategies should include preoperative administration of pneumococcal vaccine, preoperative screening of nasal bacterial flora by nasal culture test, and prior administration of a carbapenem with good cerebrospinal fluid transfer or a third- or fourth-generation cephem covering PRSP. Postoperatively, suspected meningitis may be treated with a combination of the 3 drugs used in our case, in parallel with emergency cephalic contrast computed tomography and culture tests of blood and cerebrospinal fluid. Our experience suggests that these measures will facilitate a successful outcome in frontofacial distraction osteogenesis.
...
PMID:Prevention and treatment of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis after intracraniofacial surgery with distraction osteogenesis. 1909 47