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)

Twenty-four of 66 (363.6 +/- 116/1000) post-neonatal children with acute bacterial meningitis treated between August 1991 and November 1992 at the Emergency Paediatric Unit, University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, Nigeria, had co-existing localized extracranial infections (LEI). Nineteen had bronchopneumonia (of which 14 were in combination with other infections), two had dysentery and one each acute otitis media, orbital cellulitis, and purulent conjunctivitis. LEI were significantly more frequent in children < or = 2 years, and in children with delayed presentation and delayed diagnosis after presentation. Mortality rate was higher in children with LEI (500 +/- 200/1000) than in those without (102.6 +/- 95.2/1000) (P < 0.001). There was no significant relationship between the incidence of LEI and the causative organisms of meningitis or nutritional status of children with meningitis. We conclude that co-existing LEI are not infrequent in children with acute bacterial meningitis; they contribute to delayed diagnosis and are associated with a poorer outcome.
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PMID:Localized extracranial infections in children with acute bacterial meningitis. 793 37

For the laboratory evaluation of the severity of intoxication syndrome, the spectral characteristics of low and median molecular weight substances (LMMWS) were studied in the plasma and red blood cells of 129 children with bacterial infections, among whom there were 76 children with acute intestinal infections (Flexner's dysentery, Sonne dysentery, and salmonellosis) and 53 children with bacterial purulent meningitis of hemophilic and meningococcal etiology. In the acute period, all the examinees were found to have considerable qualitative and quantitative distinctions of blood spectrograms from the normal values. There was an association of the spectral characteristics of blood LMMWS with the nosological entity, etiology and stage of disease, and the severity of intoxication syndrome. The maximum distinctions from the normal values were detected in children with bacterial meningitis running with complicating the course of acute intestinal infection. There was an increase in the blood levels of LMMWS with the concomitant intercurrent diseases occurring, as compared with the smooth uncomplicated course of disease. The studies of the natural history of disease have indicated a gradual normalization of blood spectrograms; however, in bacterial meningitis, insignificant deviations preserved at the stage of convalescence. The spectral characteristics of plasma and red blood cell LMMWS are proposed to use for the objective appraisal of the severity of intoxication syndrome and the reserve detoxification capacities of blood in children with bacterial infections.
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PMID:[Laboratory evaluation of the severity of intoxication syndrome in children with bacterial infections]. 1687 28