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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (
bacterial meningitis
)
4,038
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three patients with aseptic meningitis were subsequently diagnosed as having lupus erythematosus. One patient had a single meningitic episode, another had chronic
meningitis
, and the third two acute episodes 5 years apart. All 3 patients developed further neurophychiatric manifestations of SLE, leading to death in 1. Aseptic meningitis appears to be an early manifestation of SLE and may herald more serious brain damage. No new cases of aseptic meningitis occurred in this series after initiation of therapy for SLE. In contrast,
bacterial meningitis
did occur as a late complication of the disease.
...
PMID:Aseptic meningitis in systemic lupus erythematosus. Report of three cases. 115 56
High levels of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) activity were found in 23 cases of
bacterial meningitis
, but significantly lower levels of CSF LDH activity were observed in 11 patients with viral meningitis and in 13 patients with no central nervous system infection. No correlation was found between levels of CSF LDH activity and specific agents or the amounts of CSF white blood cell, protein, and glucose. The number of
meningitis
cases of unknown cause that could be classified as probably bacterial or viral was increased by determination of the level of CSF LDH activity. The level of CSH LDH activity is useful in differentiating bacterial from viral meningitis and, along with determination of the CSF blood cell counts and protein and glucose levels, aids in classification of
meningitis
before culture results are available.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid lactic acid dehydrogenase activity. Levels in untreated and partially antibiotic-treated meningitis. 116 86
Community-acquired
bacterial meningitis
in Vermont children under 5 years of age was recognized less frequently in 1967-1970 in those towns with low total hospitalization rates than in towns with hospitalization rates above 15 admissions per 100 population. Using the towns with high hospitalization rates as a norm, it was found that towns with fewer recognized
meningitis
cases than expected had significantly greater rates of death from obscure causes in children 1-59 months of age in 1967-1970. It is suggested that about 17 deaths in 1967-1970 in Vermont children 1-59 months of age were associated with the failure to recognize
bacterial meningitis
in children from towns with low rates of medical care utilization.
...
PMID:Undiagnosed bacterial meningitis in Vermont children. 120 24
Persistent pleocytosis of greater than 60 white blood cells/mm3 was commonly seen in children adequately treated for
bacterial meningitis
. It occurred in 13 of 21 (62%) children with Hemophilus influenzae meningitis and in 2 of 9 (22%) with pneumococcal
meningitis
. Pleocytosis alone cannot be used as an indication of prolonging therapy; significance of persistent pleocytosis is not known.
...
PMID:Persistent pleocytosis in bacterial meningitis. 124 52
Results of CSF examinations from 117 high-risk neonates were reviewed. The mean CSF cell count was 8.4 cells/mm3 and the range was 0 to 32 cells/mm.3 Approximately 60% of the CSF WBC were polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Average CSF protein concentrations were 90 mg/dl (range, 20-170 mg/dl) in term and 115 mg/dl (range, 65-150 mg/dl) in preterm infants. The average CSF glucose was 81% of the blood glucose value in term and 74% in preterm infants. Comparison of these CSF findings with those from 119 infants with
bacterial meningitis
revealed that there was considerable overlapping of values, but only one of the 119 infants with
meningitis
had a completely normal initial CSF examination. The decision to initiate antimicrobial therapy in neonates with suspected
meningitis
must be based on total evaluation of the patient.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid evaluation in neonates: comparison of high-risk infants with and without meningitis. 124 61
Infectious meningitis in adults was reviewed to establish the frequency of
meningitis
due to each causative agent and to reexamine the laboratory parameters that help to distinguish aseptic, bacterial, and mycobacterial
meningitis
. Aseptic meningitis occurred 2.2 times more often than bacterial and mycobacterial
meningitis
combined. The most common nonviral causative agent was the pneumococcus (23 cases) followed by the tubercle bacillus (11 cases) and the meningococcus (5 cases). Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Gram stain was the most useful study to rule in a bacterial cause: 89% of cases of
bacterial meningitis
had a positive initial Gram stain. Hyponatremia occurred in 73% of cases of tuberculous
meningitis
; hyponatremia combined with a negative Gram stain was highly suggestive of a tuberculous cause. One third of all patients with tuberculous and aseptic meningitis had a predominance of neutrophils in the CSF. No patient with aseptic meningitis had a CSF while count higher than 2,800 cells/cu mm or a CSF protein value higher than 250 mg/100 ml. Other reviews confirm this if cases due to lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM) are excluded. One patient with tuberculous
meningitis
in this series, and none of those cases reviewed, had a CSF white count higher than 1,200 cells/cu mm. Only 3.7% of the patients with aseptic meningitis had hypoglycorrhachia. Series reporting exclusively disease due to mumps and LCM have a higher frequency of hypoglycorrhachia.
...
PMID:Recent survey of infectious meningitis in adults: review of laboratory findings in bacterial, tuberculous, and aseptic meningitis. 126 6
The concentration of lysozyme (LZM) in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has been studied in 148 patients to evaluate its possible significance in the differential diagnosis of various diseases affecting the central nervous system (CNS). In the control group only 3 of 45 patients had detectable LZM in their CSF, the highest value being 1.3 mug/ml. The diabetic and epileptic groups did not differ from the control group. Of 8 patients with primary intracranial tumours, 4 had raised CSF-LZM levels. Twenty of 23 uraemic patients had elevated CSF-LZM, the highest value being 3.3 mug/ml. The highest values were found in patients with
bacterial meningitis
, tuberculous
meningitis
and leptomeningitis due to Aspergillus. A positive correlation was found between CSF-LZM and protein concentrations. The measurement of LZM may be of value in the diagnosis of inflammatory processes affecting the CNS and in the diagnosis of certain intracranial tumours.
...
PMID:Lysozyme activity in cerebrospinal fluid. 126 68
A total of 522 children, aged 1 month to 6 years, who presented with convulsions and fever of acute onset at the Children's Emergency Room of the University of Benin Teaching Hospital over a 1-year period, were prospectively evaluated.
Bacterial meningitis
was diagnosed in 22 (4.2%) on bacteriological and/or biochemical evidence. The causative organisms were cultured from the CSF in 13 (Neisseria meningitidis = 7, Streptococcus pneumoniae = 5 and Haemophilus influenzae = 1) and identified by Gram stain only in three (Gram-positive diplococci = 2 and Gram-negative diplococci = 1). No organisms were identified in the CSF of six of the children with
meningitis
. The prevalence of
meningitis
declined sharply after 6 months of age. Six of the children with
bacterial meningitis
lacked classical meningeal signs but had other indications for lumbar puncture. The following were significantly associated with
meningitis
: age under 6 months; focal or multiple seizures; absence of a past or family history of seizures; unrousable coma; and an extracranial focus of infection. It is concluded that
bacterial meningitis
occurs in a good proportion of children, even beyond infancy, with convulsions associated with fever of acute onset, and that decision on the need for lumbar puncture should be guided by clinical features such as age and the presence of complex febrile seizures.
...
PMID:Indications for lumbar puncture in children presenting with convulsions and fever of acute onset: experience in the Children's Emergency Room of the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Nigeria. 128 67
Bacterial meningitis
remains one of the most common life threatening infections of childhood. There exists a conventional therapy for this disease. However, with the increasing incidence of Haemophilus strains resistant to ampicillin and chloramphenicol and Streptococcus pneumonia strains relatively resistant to penicillin, alteration of current therapeutic regimens for
meningitis
may become necessary. Cephalosporins were considered as alternatives to the conventional therapy for the treatment of
bacterial meningitis
during the past decade. However, there are still some discrepancies on the use of these against some organisms despite the advent of the cephalosporins. Thus, a review article analyzing quite a number of reliable clinical trials related to cephalosporins for the treatment of
bacterial meningitis
during the past decade to date is introduced.
...
PMID:Cephalosporins in childhood bacterial meningitis. 130 53
Cytokines at an inflammatory site may be a better indicator of the clinical severity of an infectious disease than the serum levels of the cytokines. Concentrations of interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) in paired samples of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from 10 rabbits with experimental
bacterial meningitis
caused by H. influenzae type b, were measured, and compared to the concentrations of four cytokines; IL-1 beta, interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-8 (IL-8) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in CSF samples from 45 children with or without
meningitis
. The IL-1 beta concentrations in the CSF from rabbits with experimental
meningitis
were significantly higher than the concentrations in control animals without
meningitis
(p < 0.001). The mean CSF concentrations of IL-8 from meningitic children were significantly higher than in the control group without
meningitis
(p < 0.005). TNF-alpha was only detected in septic
meningitis
. Assays of IL-6, however, were not significantly different in the septic
meningitis
group, the aseptic meningitis group and the non-
meningitis
group. These data indicate a possible role of IL-1 beta, IL-8 and TNF-alpha as mediators in the meningeal inflammatory process in patients with
meningitis
and TNF-alpha, in particular, may play a role in the pathogenesis of septic
meningitis
.
...
PMID:Concentrations of interleukin-1 beta, interleukin-6, interleukin-8 and TNF-alpha in cerebrospinal fluid from children with septic or aseptic meningitis. 130 8
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