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

Anaerobic meningitis occurred in four patients in whom anaerobic bacteria had not been suspected as a possible cause. The predisposing conditions were typical of those seen in patients previously reported to have this infection and included chronic otitis media with mastoiditis, chronic sinusitis, recent craniotomy and abdominal trauma. Two of the patients had undergone immunosuppression (immunosuppressed patients); a compromised immune system may facilitate the development of anaerobic meningitis in patients with the appropritate underlying conditions. Head and neck neoplasms, head trauma, suppurative pharyngitis and laminectomy wounds are additional situations in which anaerobic meningitis occurs. Anaerobic bacterial meningitis probably occurs more often than is recognized. The cerebrospinal fluid should be transported and cultured anaerobically when meningitis develops in a patient with a predisposing condition.
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PMID:Anaerobic bacterial meningitis. 46 26

In a multicenter randomized trial, 107 children with bacterial meningitis were initially given either cefuroxime or ampicillin plus chloramphenicol. Patients were alternately assigned to 7- or 10-day courses of the designated antimicrobial regimen. CSF isolates included Haemophilus influenzae type b (89, of which 25% were beta-lactamase positive), Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Neisseria meningitidis. Although mean CSF bactericidal titers against Haemophilus isolates were 1:6 in each treatment group, H. influenzae was cultured from CSF in four of 39 patients receiving cefuroxime, 24 to 48 hours after initiation of therapy, compared with none of 40 patients given ampicillin plus chloramphenicol (P = 0.11). Clinical cure rates were similar (95%); one death occurred in each group. One child given cefuroxime had persistent meningitis after 5 days of therapy, and mastoiditis with secondary bacteremia developed in one on day 10. Three patients had relapse or reinfection. One patient who received cefuroxime for 10 days had a relapse of epiglottitis 17 days later, and of the patients given ampicillin plus chloramphenicol, one had a relapse of meningitis 1 week after 7 days of therapy, and bacteremia developed in one 42 days after completion of 10 days of therapy. No increase in either in-hospital complications or relapses occurred with a 7-day treatment course. Proof of the equivalence of the antibiotic regimens and the efficacy of 7-day courses of treatment, as well as the consequences of delayed CSF sterilization, will require additional investigation.
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PMID:Cefuroxime versus ampicillin plus chloramphenicol in childhood bacterial meningitis: a multicenter randomized controlled trial. 352 32

CT examinations of 42 cases of bacterial meningitis revealed in 38, 1% of the cases relevant inflammatory processes at the base of the skull which were of significant importance for a transmitted infection. Such infections were: Sinusitis frontalis, ethmoidalis, maxillaris and sphenoidalis, mastoiditis or petrositis, suppurating mucocele, impression fracture, and an intracranially penetrated foreign body. Excepting the identification of fine fractures, conventional x-ray films were diagnostically superior. Hence, especially in the acute stages, special projections can be omitted, if CT is effected in the region of the osseous base of the skull. CT performed in inflammatory diseases of the brain must include the base of the skull, since this will yield reliable pointers to an original focus of the inflammation requiring appropriate treatment and elimination.
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PMID:[CT of the base of the skull in bacterial meningitis (author's transl)]. 734 61

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

Ten adult patients with recurrent bacterial meningitis (RBM) of 22 episodes were diagnosed and treated at the Dicle University Hospital from January 1990 to December 1995. Apart from 22 episodes of RBM these patients had an additional 25 episodes treated at other hospitals. The RBM attacks developed after closed head trauma in four patients, asplenia and chronic otitis media in one patient, chronic otitis media and oto-mastoiditis in one patient, chronic maxillary sinusitis in one patient, chronic mastoiditis in one patients, and suppurative foci of facial bones caused by shrapnel pieces and no predisposing condition in one patient. In 10 RBM episodes, Streptococcus pneumoniae was isolated from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and/or blood culture, and in one episode Proteus vulgaris was isolated from CSF and otitis media suppuration. In the four episodes both cultures were negative, but direct microscopy showed Gram-positive diplococci on Gram-staining. Three of the patients died from meningitis-related complications.
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PMID:Recurrent bacterial meningitis: a 6-year experience in adult patients. 927 25

The aim of this study was to evaluate the characteristics of patients with acute bacterial meningitis (ABM) developed secondary to acute and chronic otitis media (OM). Between 1991 and 2001, among 269 adult patients with ABM, 56 who were secondary to OM were included in the study. We reviewed the charts of patients who were diagnosed as ABM following acute or chronic OM. Risk factors associated with mortality were determined by using a logistic regression model. The mean age of the patients, 38 male and 18 female, was 25.8 +/- 10.8 years (range 14 - 65). Forty-four of these cases (79%) have had chronic OM, of whom 19 (43% of the 44) have also had chronic mastoiditis and 12 (27% of the 44) acute OM. Twenty-three patients (41%) died, during either hospitalization or the follow-up period. Univariate analysis revealed comatose mental status on admission, inappropriate antibiotic treatment before admission, and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) as significant risk factors for mortality. In multifactorial analysis, comatose mental status (OR=42.5, CI=6.4-280.1, p=0.001) and elevated ESR (OR=1.0, CI=1.01-1.07; p=0.005) remained as significant predictors for mortality. In conclusion, the primary sources of infection leading to the development of ABM should be investigated carefully to reduce the morbidity and mortality rates. It is hoped that this study will raise awareness among general practitioners and otolaryngologists concerning the role of ABM as one of the most important complications of OM.
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PMID:Acute bacterial meningitis as a complication of otitis media and related mortality factors. 1240 69

A 65-year-old woman with diabetes mellitus and chronic otitis media developed headache, fever, and hoarseness, all of which did not responded to the oral antibiotics. As stiff neck and lower cranial nerve palsies appeared, bacterial meningitis was suspected. Neurological examination revealed the right hearing disturbance, right recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy, left sternocleidomastoid muscle atrophy and bilateral tongue atrophy. The CSF examination revealed mild pleocytosis and elevated protein, but no bacterial organism was cultured from the CSF. CT scans showed bilateral mastoiditis, and the right mastoid process and a posterior part of the petrous bone were eroded, indicating the exposed bony structures to the posterior fossa. MRI scans demonstrated the thickening of the dura mater of the posterior fossa and the right cerebellar tentorium. This is a rare example of bacterial pachymeningitis of the posterior fossa, the clinical symptoms and MRI findings of which resolved solely by antimicrobial agents without corticosteroid.
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PMID:[A case of hypertrophic pachymeningitis, resolved by antimicrobial therapy]. 1547 Oct 88

Streptococcus pneumoniae accounts for approximately 50% of bacterial meningitis cases in the United States annually. Since the advent of antibiotics, pneumococcal meningitis as a complication of a primary otogenic focus has been rare in the United States. The widespread use of immunosuppressants and increasing bacterial resistance to commonly prescribed antibiotics may contribute to a higher incidence of complications of otitis media in the future, similar to that of the pre-antibiotic era. We report a case of otogenic pneumococcal meningitis with pneumocephalus in an adult male on chronic immunosuppressant therapy. A 33-year-old man with Crohn's disease and azathioprine use presented to our Emergency Department with progressive headache while taking antibiotics for otitis media. Initial computed tomography scan of the brain revealed pneumocephaly, and cerebrospinal fluid analysis and culture diagnosed pneumococcal meningitis. The patient continued to have fevers while receiving intravenous antibiotics and underwent bilateral myringotomies; his clinical course subsequently improved significantly. Meningitis is a rare complication of Streptococcus pneumoniae infections since the advent of antibiotics; however, it may become more frequent with increasing antibiotic resistance and a growing population of immunocompromised patients. Additionally, pneumocephalus in the setting of meningitis and otitis media should raise the suspicion for mastoiditis (even without overt clinical findings) and early consultation with an otolaryngologist is warranted.
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PMID:Otogenic pneumococcal meningitis with pneumocephalus. 1859 73

Infratentorial subdural empyema is a life-threatening rare complication of bacterial meningitis. Infratentorial subdural empyemas constitute only a small portion of all cases with intracranial infectious diseases. We present a 15-year-old boy with infratentorial subdural empyema. Empyema was diagnosed with serial follow-up computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging while he was being treated for bacterial meningitis secondary to neglected mastoiditis. The patient was successfully treated with emergent surgery and appropriate antibiotics. Empyema should be considered in patients with suspected or proven bacterial menengitis and associated ear nose throat infection with neurological signs that suggest a posterior fossa lesion.
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PMID:Infratentorial subdural empyema. 1943 Nov 37

Acute bacterial meningitis is a common neurological emergency and a leading cause of death and neurological disability worldwide. Diagnosis is based on clinical and microbiological findings with neuroimaging in the form of CT reserved for those with specific adverse clinical features or when an underlying cause such as mastoiditis is suspected. MRI is extremely useful for detecting and monitoring the complications of meningitis. These can be remembered by the mnemonic HACTIVE (hydrocephalus, abscess, cerebritis/cranial nerve lesion, thrombosis, infarct, ventriculitis/vasculopathy and extra-axial collection). Diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) are useful to distinguish abscess from other ring enhancing lesions.
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PMID:Role of imaging in the diagnosis of acute bacterial meningitis and its complications. 2070 70


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