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

Seventeen children with previous bacterial meningitis and 17 sib controls were examined clinically and otoscopically. They were also tested with air-conduction and bone-conduction audiometry and evaluated by tympanometry. There were no major neurological abnormalities and few otoscopical signs of ear disease. 21% of the ears showed abnormalities on air-conduction audiometry but all were normal on bone-conduction audiometry. 30% had abnormal middle-ear pressures (more negative than 100 mm water) on tympanometry and 7% had abnormal compliance of the drum. There were no significant differences on any test between the postmeningitis children and the sib controls. Population studies have confirmed that minor hearing loss due to middle-ear dysfunction is common in children, but is probably temporary in most of them. We have found no excess of middle-ear dysfunction and no sensorineural deafness in these postmeningitis children, but other workers have shown that nerve deafness may occur in association with clinical neurological damage. However, much of the deafness attributed to bacterial meningitis in other studies may well reflect population variability.
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PMID:Deafness after bacterial meningitis. 87 47

Recent progress in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has made it possible to obtain detailed images of the inner ear by delineating the lymphatic fluid within the labyrinth. We analyzed CT scans and MR images in 70 ears manifesting profound deafness owing to inner ear lesions and compared their detective ability for inner ear lesions. The following results were obtained. 1) CT scan examination showed slight to extensive ossification of the labyrinth in six ears (9%), whereas MRI examination revealed low to absent signal intensity of the inner ear in nine ears (13%). Therefore, it was concluded that MRI is more sensitive in detecting abnormalities of the inner ear than CT scan. 2) MRI provided useful information as to whether the cochlear turn is filled with lymphatic fluid or obstructed. This point was one of the greatest advantages of MRI over CT scan. 3) Abnormal findings in either or both the CT scan and the MRI were detected in suppurative labyrinthitis occurring secondary to chronic otitis media, bacterial meningitis and in inner ear trauma. However, such abnormal findings were not detected in patients with idiopathic progressive sensorineural hearing loss, ototoxicity or sudden deafness. These findings should be taken into consideration in pre-operative assessment of cochlear implant candidates.
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PMID:[Image analysis of the inner ear with CT and MR imaging: pre-operative assessment for cochlear implant surgery]. 163 88

Meningitis is the most important cause of acquired postnatal deafness and neurologic disorders in children. To determine if cell-mediated immunity is casually related to the pathogenesis of bacterial meningitis, T cell subsets were quantitated from blood of the 29 children with clinical and bacteriologic diagnosis of Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Neisseria meningitidis bacterial meningitis. The CD4+ T cells increased and CD8+ T cells decreased in patients with meningitis as compared to patient control subjects (bacterial infections without meningitis) and normal healthy control subjects. An elevated percentage of CD25+ (interleukin-2 receptors) and HLA-DR+ (immune-response gene-associated antigen) T cells were detected from all patients with meningitis. All 29 patients with meningitis had highly elevated CD4+ CD45R+ (suppressor-inducer) cells and reciprocally depressed CD4+ CDw29+ (helper-inducer) cells compared with healthy age-matched normal and patient control subjects. These findings indicate characteristic immunologic T cell abnormalities from meningitis. The abnormal increase in the CD4+ CD45R+ suppressor-inducer or "virgin" cells and expression of activation antigens on T cells may be of help in future understanding of abnormal immune reactions from bacterial meningitis. However, deficiency of the CD4+ CDw29+ helper-inducer or "memory" cells may contribute to the impaired helper function for B cell-induced protective antibody synthesis to bacterial capsular polysaccharides found in this disease.
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PMID:Bacterial meningitis: T cell activation and immunoregulatory CD4+ T cell subset alteration. 171 Jun 32

Acquired central auditory disorders not due to a tumour are unusual. The well-known conditions such as hypoxic encephalopathy, erythroblastosis, bacterial meningitis and trauma are reviewed. Recent experimental and clinical studies contribute to progress in the understanding of the pathogenesis and etiology of these conditions. The pattern of presbyacusis and cortical deafness is discussed also. AIDS must be considered as a new cause of acquired central auditory dysfunction.
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PMID:[Non-neoplastic central hearing loss--a review]. 174 76

Clinical studies of predisposing factors in the development of hearing loss secondary to bacterial meningitis have produced conflicting results. An animal model of meningogenic labyrinthitis was developed for more precise study of these parameters. Rabbits were inoculated intrathecally with 10(5) pneumococci to induce meningitis. Hearing thresholds were measured using auditory-evoked responses to 1 kHz, 10 kHz, and click stimuli before infection and every 12 hours thereafter. Profound deafness occurred in all subjects at an average of 48 hours following infection. The incidence and severity of hearing loss was strongly correlated with the duration of meningitis. Temporal bone histology revealed acute inflammation of all perilymphatic spaces including the cochlear aqueduct. This model demonstrated that the risk and severity of hearing loss increase with the duration of meningitis and suggested that the cochlear aqueduct is an anatomic pathway for the extension of infection from the cerebrospinal fluid to the cochlea. The implications for therapy in humans is discussed.
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PMID:Hearing loss and pneumococcal meningitis: an animal model. 176 98

The infant or child who presents to the Emergency Department with bacterial meningitis may have nonspecific vague symptoms with few signs of serious illness. However, the disease is often rapidly progressive and life-threatening, and may be associated with respiratory failure, circulatory failure, increased intracranial pressure, disseminated intravascular coagulation, or convulsions, any of which may lead to a fatal outcome. It is important for the triage technician in an Emergency Department to cautiously inspect each young patient who presents with illness, carefully considering whether the presenting syndrome of symptoms and signs might be consistent with early meningitis. If the young patient is triaged in a nonemergent category, then periodic assessments of the patients waiting to be seen may ensure that, when the infant or child with an obscure presentation develops evidence suggesting this diagnosis, the triage technician will promptly notify the appropriate definitive care providers who assume responsibility for immediate definitive evaluation and stabilization. Changes in delivery of lifesaving care to the life-threatened child are being impacted by current advances in the understanding of the biochemical basis of disease at the cellular and subcellular levels. Endotoxin release into the blood causes increased production of kinins, which results in vasodilatation and increased vascular permeability. Members of the leukotriene family may also enhance vascular permeability as well as produce augmented leukocyte aggregation to vascular endothelium, vasoconstriction, and bronchoconstriction. Endotoxin activates the complement cascade and induces platelets to form reversible aggregates that may be trapped in the pulmonary microcirculation; and endotoxemia-activated platelets release serotonin, which may be associated with pulmonary hypertension. Now that we have antibiotics that are effective against organisms whose degradation produces endotoxin, there is interest in lessening the host inflammatory response to endotoxin through use of dexamethasone as an anti-inflammatory agent. Clinical trials have revealed that patients who received dexamethasone became afebrile earlier and were less likely to acquire deafness after bacterial meningitis. Because administration of antibiotics is the current specific medical therapy for this life-threatening microbial invasion, it is reasonable to continue to strive to shorten the interval between recognition of disease and specific therapy. However, new studies suggest that consequences of the complex host inflammatory response (at the cellular and subcellular level) to microbial invasion and endotoxin release from bacterial degradation are increasingly important in determining survival or severity of morbidity. Therapeutic intervention with specific antibiotics and steroid anti-inflammatory agents for modulating host responses enhances outcome.
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PMID:Emergency department stabilization of pediatric patients with bacterial meningitis. Current advances. 189 92

Despite the availability of potent antibiotics, bacterial meningitis is still a major clinical problem. Mortality is high, and up to a third of survivors are left with neurologic sequelae that may range from mild behavioral disorders to mental retardation or deafness. New therapeutic approaches to meningeal inflammation, however, are reducing the neurologic risks.
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PMID:Mediators of meningitis: therapeutic implications. 189 48

The incidence of brain abscess was studied on all cases occurring in residents of Olmsted County, Minn., from 1935 through 1981. Thirty-eight cases (9 cases first diagnosed at autopsy) were identified and followed through the Rochester Olmsted County medical record-linkage system at the Mayo Clinic. The incidence rate was 1.3/100,000 person-years (PY), 1.9 in males and 0.6 in females. Incidence decreased from 2.7 in 1935-44 to 0.9 in 1965-81. Rates were higher in children 5-9 years old (2.4) and after age 60 (2.6 PY). An etiologic agent was identified in 29 cases (76%) with streptococci being the most frequently isolated. Case-fatality ratio was 38% (11/29), stable over time. Concurrent bacterial meningitis was the strongest predictor of death. Neurologic sequelae were observed in 8 (44%) of the 18 surviving patients including epilepsy (5 cases), deafness and motor impairment.
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PMID:Incidence and prognosis of brain abscess in a defined population: Olmsted County, Minnesota, 1935-1981. 192 45

Bacterial meningitis is a common cause of profound deafness and, hence, a common cause of deafness in published series of patients treated with a cochlear prosthesis. Labyrinthitis ossificans is a common finding in meningogenic labyrinthitis and has been considered a relative contraindication to cochlear implantation. In the present study, the numbers of remaining spiral ganglion cells in cases of meningogenic labyrinthitis were correlated with the severity of new bone formation within the inner ear. Six temporal bones in which profound sensorineural hearing loss occurred in life secondary to meningogenic labyrinthitis were studied by serial section light microscopy. Some degree of labyrinthitis ossificans was found in four of six. There was a moderately strong negative correlation between the number of years of total deafness and the percentage of normal of the remaining spiral ganglion cell count. There was a strong negative correlation between the degree of bony occlusion by labyrinthitis ossificans and the normality of the spiral ganglion cell count. The percentage of bony occlusion of the membranous labyrinth increased with the years of total deafness. The significance of these findings for cochlear implantation of individuals with meningogenic labyrinthitis is discussed.
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PMID:Histopathologic correlation of spiral ganglion cell count and new bone formation in the cochlea following meningogenic labyrinthitis and deafness. 195 61

Labyrinthine ossification can be found in a high percentage of patients with profound deafness resulting from bacterial meningitis. Radiographic evidence of ossification can be found as early as 2 months after the acute infection, indicating that the intracochlear process probably begins much earlier. If long, intracochlear cochlear implants are to be most successfully used in these patients, an aggressive approach to clinical management following the meningitis should be taken. Illustrative case reports and suggested guidelines for evaluation and treatment are given.
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PMID:Labyrinthine ossification after meningitis: its implications for cochlear implantation. 212 62


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