Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0085437 (bacterial meningitis)
4,038 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intracranial injury resultant from a chopstick penetrating the oral cavity is often fatal in children, and only 5 clinical cases have been reported. If the depth of penetration is indeterminable, due to the chopstick being removed or the remaining piece not being located, then injury management is challenging; here, we report such a case. A 26-month-old girl fell over with a plastic chopstick in her mouth. The chopstick was removed immediately and without breakage by her father. He noted that around 3 cm of the pointed end had pierced the palate. CT revealed air bubbles in the retropharyngeal space but no abnormality in the cranium. Subsequent complications included bacterial meningitis and right hemiparesis but neither MRI nor any alternative imaging modality could aid in locating the intracranial lesion that induced the weakness. Neurological findings suggested injury of the right lateral corticospinal tract at the lower end of the medulla oblongata. An axial T2-weighted MRI showed a 30-mm high signal path of penetration from the posterior nasopharyngeal wall to the dura at the craniocervical junction. When the route is extended 36 mm intracranially from the wound orifice, the path makes superficial contact with the right lateral portion of the medulla oblongata, which corresponds with the lateral corticospinal tract. We therefore hypothesize that this was the lesion location but that it was too small to be detected using MRI.
...
PMID:[Transoral Penetrating Cranial Injury by a Chopstick:A Case Report]. 2879 Feb 14

Meningitis is an uncommon complications of head trauma. Vasculitis in bacterial meningitis is seen in 9%-25% of adults. Neurological deficits in bacterial meningitis are seen in about one-third of children. Isolated cranial nerve palsies are common, whereas major deficits such as hemiparesis and quadriparesis are rare. We describe a case of a 7-year-old boy who had post-traumatic meningitis complicated with quadriparesis and severe vasculitis of bilateral anterior and posterior circulation with moyamoya vasculopathy.
...
PMID:Pyogenic Meningitis Complicated with Extensive Central Nervous System Vasculitis and Moyamoya Vasculopathy. 3027 71

The occurrence of cerebral vasospasm secondary to bacterial meningitis is relatively rare. Furthermore, there is no specific treatment cerebral vasospasm. Endovascular treatment may be essential for cases with the advanced clinical course. Balloon angioplasty or intra-arterial injection of verapamil, nicardipine, or nitroglycerin has been previously reported. We experienced successful treatment using intra-arterial infusion of fasudil hydrochloride. To our knowledge, this is the first case to report the intra-arterial injection of fasudil hydrochloride for treating cerebral vasospasm secondary to bacterial meningitis. A 37-year-old female who presented with dizziness had a right cerebellar tumor that was excised and diagnosed as glioblastoma. On postoperative day 10, Streptococcus oralis meningitis was detected. On postoperative day 20, the patient developed right hemiparesis with a severe vasospasm of the bilateral middle cerebral artery and anterior cerebral artery. Intra-arterial fasudil hydrochloride injection was performed for 3 days, following which the patient's symptoms improved. Symptomatic cerebral vasospasm secondary to bacterial meningitis is relatively rare and difficult to treat; in selected cases, intra-arterial fasudil hydrochloride injection was an effective treatment for cerebral vasospasm secondary to bacterial meningitis.
...
PMID:Intra-arterial Injection of Fasudil Hydrochloride for Cerebral Vasospasm Secondary to Bacterial Meningitis. 3032 49

Meningitis or meningoencephalitis is a known complication of scrub typhus. Focal neurological deficits are rarely reported including hemiparesis, quadriparesis and isolated cranial nerve palsies. Here we are reporting a 24 years female who presented with fever, headache, ptosis, diplopia, facial deviation and unsteadiness of gait due to scrub typhus. Scrub typhus can present as acute or subacute meningitis complicated by multiple cranial palsies and cerebellitis. Hence it needs to be differentiated from acute bacterial meningitis and tubercular meningitis as delay in diagnosis and treatment will affect the morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Scrub Meningitis Complicated by Multiple Cranial Nerve Palsies and Cerebellitis. 3157 66

A 27-year-old healthy woman developed spontaneous right-sided orbital cellulitis, followed by left hemiparesis and cranial nerve palsies. MRI revealed underlying basal exudates and vasculitic infarction involving the pons and cerebellar peduncles, following which a cerebrospinal fluid examination confirmed acute bacterial meningitis. Although the patient remained afebrile, imaging revealed asymptomatic septic foci in bilateral lungs, empyema and pyelonephritis. Blood culture grew drug-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae The case highlights the absence of fever in an immune-competent patient presenting with young-onset stroke secondary to meningitis.
...
PMID:Rampant spread of infection in an afebrile immune-competent patient presenting with young-onset ischaemic stroke. 3284 55


<< Previous 1 2