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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

We undertook a retrospective study to examine our experience with acute mastoiditis over a 12-year period. Fifty-eight cases were identified in children aged 3 months to 15 years. Acute mastoiditis was the first evidence of otitis media in 54% of our patients. Pain and fever lasting for more than a median period of 4 days were most likely to be the harbingers of incipient acute mastoiditis. Streptococcus pneumoniae was the most common organism recovered from the cultures. All children were treated with intravenous antibiotics; 41 children were managed with an adjunctive drainage procedure. No statistically significant differences were observed between the cure rates and failure rates for children treated surgically with myringotomies with or without tubes and children managed more aggressively with mastoidectomies. One infant had bacterial meningitis. Cholesteatoma was diagnosed in two children. We conclude from our study that acute mastoiditis occurs mainly in young children and may be the first evidence of ear disease. Pain and fever that persist despite appropriate treatment for acute otitis media are the two most important symptoms. Intravenous antibiotics combined with myringotomy with or without tube insertion are as appropriate as intravenous antibiotics with mastoidectomy for initial management of acute mastoiditis in the absence of a subperiosteal abscess or central nervous system extension.
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PMID:Acute mastoiditis in children: a 12-year retrospective study. 933 11

In this second in a series of famous historic personages who suffered from ear disease (see Yardley M, Rutka J. Troy, Mycenae, and the Otologic Demise of Herr Heinrich Schliemann. J Otolaryngol 1998; 27:217-221), we review the life and otology-related death of the legendary playwright Oscar Wilde. In his time, Wilde ridiculed the social hypocrisy of the Victorian age, championed the individual, and pleaded for a more tolerant and forgiving society in his many books, plays, and letters. Very much the acerbic and iconoclastic wit, Wilde's private and later very public affair de coeur with Lord Alfred Douglas, the son of the Marquis of Queensberry, still continues to interest and paradoxically shock our sensitivities. Wilde's ultimate demise from an otogenic bacterial meningitis appears all the more ironic when one considers the role his father, Sir William Wilde, played as one of the founding fathers of modern otology.
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PMID:The irony of being Oscar: the legendary life and death of Oscar Wilde. 1100 77