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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (
bacterial meningitis
)
4,038
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aims of the present study were to document the epidemiology, clinical features and complications of childhood acute
bacterial meningitis
(ABM) in The Sudan during both an inter-epidemic (endemic) period (1985-1986), and the 1988 serogroup A epidemic; and to examine the phenotypic and genetic similarities and differences of Neisseria meningitidis strains isolated in The Sudan and Sweden. A new enzyme immunoassay test (Pharmacia Meningitis
EIA
-Test) was evaluated as a potential rapid diagnostic method for the detection of Haemophilus influenzae (HI) type b, Neisseria meningitidis (MC) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (PNC). The test was found to have good sensitivity (0.86) and specificity (0.95) in the inter-epidemic period; and to be adaptable to the field work in The Sudan during the 1988 MC epidemic. During inter-epidemic (endemic) situations in The Sudan, greater than 90% of childhood ABM was caused by one of the three organisms, HI type b, MC and PNC. HI accounted for 57% of the cases. The peak incidence (76%) of HI cases was in infants (less than 12 months) similar to the situation in other African countries. The overall case fatality ratio was 18.6%. Prospective follow-up of survivors for 3-4 years revealed that an additional 43% either died or had permanent neurological complications, the most prevalent and persistent of which was sensorineural hearing loss recorded in 22% of long term survivors. Post-meningitic children were found to have significantly lower intelligence quotients (92.3 +/- 13.9) than their sibling controls (100.7 +/- 10.2, P = 0.029). Features of the large serogroup A sulphonamide resistant MC epidemic (February-August 1988) in Khartoum are described. An estimated annual incidence of 1,679/100,000 was recorded at the peak of the epidemic. The highest attack rate was in young children less than 5 years, as in many other African countries; nevertheless, a high morbidity was observed in adults (31% of the cases greater than or equal to 20 years). The clinical features, mortality (6.3%) and short term sequelae in Sudanese children were generally within the framework described for MC disease elsewhere. Detailed analysis of MC isolates from Sudan and Sweden by characterizing their electrophoretic enzyme types, DNA restriction endonuclease pattern and outer membrane proteins, revealed that serogroup A MC clone III-1 was responsible of The Sudan epidemic in 1988 and has been the dominant serogroup A organism in Sweden since 1973. The Sudanese strains isolated prior to the epidemic (1985) were clone IV-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Childhood acute bacterial meningitis in the Sudan: an epidemiological, clinical and laboratory study. 211 7
A total of 250 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens were analyzed using a rapid enzyme immunoassay (Pharmacia Meningitis
EIA
-Test) (
EIA
) for the detection of antigens of Haemophilus influenzae type b, Neisseria meningitidis (serogroups A,B,C) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (25 selected types). The test is performed in less than 1 h and read by the naked eye.
EIA
and coagglutination (CoA) were compared with a constructed reference that comprised samples which were either positive by culture and/or on direct microscopy (DM), or in which there were positive results with both
EIA
and CoA for the bacteria covered by the assays. Using this reference for CSF samples assayed in a period between two meningococcal meningitis epidemics, the sensitivity was 0.86 for
EIA
and 0.69 for CoA, the specificity 0.95 (
EIA
) and 0.97 (CoA), the predictive value for a positive result 0.81 (
EIA
) and 0.87 (CoA) and, the predictive value for a negative result 0.96 (
EIA
) and 0.93 (CoA). Antibiotics had been given to 54% of the patients before admission. All of the 56 samples that were positive in any of the tests taken during an epidemic of group A meningococcal disease were detected by
EIA
; CoA was negative in 45% and culture/DM was negative in 32%. Sequential dilutions of two CSF samples from which H. influenzae type b had been isolated, showed the
EIA
to be 16-32 times more sensitive than CoA. With both technical feasibility and good sensitivity and specificity, the
EIA
seems to be useful and reliable for the rapid diagnosis of
bacterial meningitis
, especially in situations where pretreatment with antibiotics are likely.
...
PMID:Rapid diagnosis of bacterial meningitis by an enzyme immunoassay of cerebrospinal fluid. 250 29
We evaluated the effectiveness of 5-day antibacterial therapy for
bacterial meningitis
in children. The study group included 26 children from 2 months to 15 years of age, admitted with microbiologically confirmed
bacterial meningitis
in 1990-1993 and treated for 5 days. A historical comparison group of 49 patients treated for 8 to 15 days was used. Penicillin monotherapy (300 mg/kg body weight) was used for meningococcal and pneumococcal meningitis and ampicillin (300 mg/kg body weight) for Haemophilus influenzae b meningitis. On day 5 of therapy the activity of aspartate aminotransferase (AST), lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), creatine phosphokinase (CPK) and gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase (gamma GT) in the CSF was determined by photocolorimetric assay and the concentration of creatine kinase BB (CK-BB) by ELISA. IL-6 was analysed using
EIA
technique and a cerebral ultrasound was performed at the time of the termination of the antibacterial therapy. The mean follow-up time was 1.3 years for children in the study group and 3.2 in the control group. The time of hospitalisation was shorter in children treated for 5 days (p < 0.005). Complete clinical recovery was 81% in the study group and 66% in the comparison group at the time of the termination of antibacterial therapy. No relapses occurred. The activity of AST, CPK, LDH, and gamma GT in the CSF had returned to normal by the 5th day of therapy, but almost a 7-fold higher concentration of CK-BB was registered. The concentration of IL-6 in the CSF decreased with the therapy from 1,800 pg/ml to 685 pg/ml but still remained high.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Five days of antibacterial therapy for bacterial meningitis in children? 762 59
A recently introduced ELISA test (EIA-Test) was used for the detection of the common organisms that cause acute
bacterial meningitis
(ABM). The test--which detects antigens of Haemophilus influenzae type b, Neisseria meningitidis (serogroups A, B, C) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (25 selected types)--is performed in less than 1 hour and read by the naked eye. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens of 125 Sudanese children (1 month-14 years) admitted with a provisional diagnosis of meningitis/meningoencephalitis were prospectively examined with the
EIA
-Test, direct microscopy (DM) using Gram stain and culture. Of the 56 positive CSF specimens, the
EIA
-Test had the highest yield (100%), followed by culture (33.9%) and DM (30.4%). Nineteen (33.9%) of the positive samples came from children who had been treated with antibiotics prior to admission, and all were positive in the
EIA
-Test.
EIA
-Test was also the only positive test in 31 (55.4%) cases. From the present study, and similar to previous observations, the
EIA
-Test seems to have valuable potential for the rapid diagnosis of ABM and is of particular help in patients who have been pre-treated with antibiotics.
...
PMID:An ELISA assay for the rapid diagnosis of acute bacterial meningitis. 868 1
The study describes an 18-month surveillance of the epidemiological, clinical and microbiological features of childhood acute
bacterial meningitis
(ABM) seven months after the end of a major epidemic of Neisseria meningitidis (MC) in Khartoum. A total of 125 children, aged one month to 14 years, who were admitted with a provisional diagnosis of meningitis/meningoencephalitis to the Children's Emergency Hospital (CEH) in Khartoum, Sudan, were prospectively enrolled in the study.
Bacterial meningitis
was diagnosed by direct microscopy (DM), culture or a recently introduced ELISA assay (
EIA
-test) in 56 children. Haemophilus influenzae (HI) and MC were the commonest causative bacteria (each accounting for 38%) and were followed by Streptococcus pneumoniae (PNC, 23%). There was a relative decrease in the proportion of HI which was found to be the leading causative bacteria in a previous study done in the same hospital during endemic situations. This was accounted for by a relative excess of MC during the post-epidemic period. Molecular analysis of two MC strains revealed that clone III-I of serogroup A (that caused an intercontinental wave of MC disease between 1983 and 1990) was still prevalent. The case fatality rate was 28.6% which is higher than that reported in Sudan (18.6%) during endemic situations; but comparable to the mortality in other African countries. Of the prognostic factors on admission, low systolic blood pressure (< 70 mmHg), hyperpyrexia (temperature > 40 degrees C) and light to deep coma correlated significantly with a fatal outcome.
...
PMID:Post-endemic acute bacterial meningitis in Sudanese children. 889 69
To enhance the detection of
bacterial meningitis
in an East Asian surveillance study, we employed cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) bacterial culture, latex agglutination (LA) and polymerase chain reaction-enzyme immunoassay (PCR-EIA) testing for Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (Sp). The sensitivity and specificity of CSF PCR-
EIA
testing was compared to LA and culture. A meningitis case was defined by one positive result for any of the three tests. The sensitivity of H. influenzae CSF PCR-
EIA
, LA, and culture was 100%, 40% and 57.5% respectively; and for Sp CSF PCR-
EIA
, LA and culture, the sensitivity was 100%, 58.3% and 66.7%, respectively. Hib and Sp specificity was 100% by each method. CSF PCR-
EIA
was more sensitive than culture or LA for the detection of Hib and Sp meningitis cases increasing their incidence by 74% and 50% compared to culture respectively. CSF PCR-
EIA
should be included for the detection of
bacterial meningitis
in surveillance studies.
...
PMID:Incidence of bacterial meningitis in Asia using enhanced CSF testing: polymerase chain reaction, latex agglutination and culture. 1727 56