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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (
bacterial meningitis
)
4,038
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We measured the activity of adenosine deaminase (ADA) in the cerebrospinal fluid of 3 patients with tuberculous meningitis, 38 with
viral meningitis
, 15 with
bacterial meningitis
, 5 with malignant lymphoma, 11 with cerebrovascular diseases and 13 with miscellaneous neurological disorders. The highest ADA activities were observed in patients with tuberculous meningitis (median 21.3 U/l, range 20.0-23.0) and lymphoma (13.0 U/l, range 4.0-25.0). The sensitivity of the test for diagnosing tuberculous meningitis was 100% and the specificity 99% when a cut-off value of 20.0 U/l was used. We conclude that determination of ADA in cerebrospinal fluid is useful for the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis, but that high activity also can be seen in some other CNS disorders, e.g. lymphoma with meningeal involvement.
...
PMID:Diagnostic value of cerebrospinal fluid adenosine deaminase determination. 158 21
In a retrospective study of 78 cases of adult meningitis, the CSF lactate was measured on the first spinal tap (ST); 25 had a
bacterial meningitis
, 28 a
viral meningitis
; 22 other cases had been on antibiotics prior to admission; 3 cases had meningitis of rare aetiology. The median CSF lactate level among the 25 bacterial cases amounted to 13.6 mmol/l (range: 3.5-24.5) whereas it remained low in the 28 viral cases: 2.7 mmol/l (range: 1.4-4.2). These differences are highly significant. The comparison of the CSF lactate level with the other tests routinely performed showed that the CSF lactate level had the highest sensitivity, specificity and predictive values. The CSF lactate level on the first ST had no prognostic value, but a rapid decrease of the CSF lactate during the treatment is indicative of good prognosis. Among the pretreated cases, a high lactate level could be an indication that bacteria were the causal agents. In conclusion, the measurement of the CSF lactate, quickly performed and inexpensive, is worth performing when a meningitis is suspected, as it appears to be the best way of distinguishing bacterial from non-
bacterial meningitis
.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid lactate in 78 cases of adult meningitis. 219 Oct 22
Advances in the understanding of the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of meningitis have occurred primarily through the use of experimental animal models. These models have proven to be particularly valuable in experimental
bacterial meningitis
, focusing on the bacterial virulence factors responsible for the initiation of infections, CNS invasion, and induction of SAS inflammation. Recent studies have examined the formation of host inflammatory cytokines in response to these virulence factors. These cytokines may be responsible for many of the pathophysiologic consequences of
bacterial meningitis
(eg. increased BBB permeability, cerebral edema, and increased intracranial pressure). Meningitis due to C. neoformans occurs most commonly in patients with defects in cell-mediated immunity (eg, AIDS), and the depletion of T helper cells in AIDS patients may allow unrestricted cryptococcal growth.
Viral meningitis
is an illness of low prevalence when compared with the overall occurrence of viral infections at other sites. CNS infection usually occurs by means of traversal across barriers that normally exclude viral invasion of the CNS, primarily through hematogenous dissemination from initial sites of infection. These advances in the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of bacterial, fungal, and
viral meningitis
may lead to the development of innovative treatment strategies for these disorders.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis and pathophysiology of meningitis. 227 88
Purpura fulminans is an uncommon catastrophic syndrome that occurs in children, typically one to four weeks after a seemingly benign infectious process. The child usually presents with a high fever, purpuric ecchymosis, hypotension, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and gangrene of the extremities. We have recently treated six children, whose mean age was 22 months; three were male and three were female. Five of the six had a change of mental status upon initial examination. Their mean temperature was 104 degrees F. All six children had purpuric involvement of their extremities; three had involvement of their hands, two had involvement of their faces, and two had involvement of their trunks. All had absent palpable pulses and sluggish capillary refill in the involved hands and feet. Two patients died shortly after admission as a result of severe end-stage sepsis. The platelet counts in these two patients, and the white blood cell counts were markedly depressed. The mean platelet count of the survivors was 370,000 and the mean white blood cell count was 25,000. Lumbar punctures were positive for
bacterial meningitis
in five patients and
viral meningitis
in one patient. All patients were treated with intravenous heparin. Of the four survivors, two lost significant tissue and required multiple plastic reconstructive procedures, and two improved on heparin alone with no tissue loss. In addition to systemic support and intravenous antibiotics, the mainstay of treatment is one of immediate heparinization and a continuous heparin drip. Heparin prevents subsequent small vessel thrombosis and limits tissue loss due to ongoing purpura. Conservative management of the purpuric lesions is the treatment of choice until final demarcation occurs.
...
PMID:The surgical implications of purpura fulminans. 234 Feb 49
In prospective studies, tumor necrosis factor (TNF alpha) was detected in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 33 of 38 children with
bacterial meningitis
(BM) but in none of 15 with
viral meningitis
/encephalitis (P less than .001). BM CSF TNF alpha (less than 35 to greater than 25,500 pg/ml) correlated with CSF bacterial density (P less than .01), CSF protein (P less than .001), endotoxin (LPS) in gram-negative disease (P less than .01), and consecutive febrile hospital days (P less than .001); initial CSF TNF alpha greater than 1000 pg/ml was associated with seizures (P less than .05). Only 5 children with BM (13%) had detectable plasma TNF alpha activity on admission. A higher proportion who died had detectable plasma TNF alpha activity compared with survivors (3/4 vs. 2/34, P less than .005). Platelet-activating factor (PAF) in CSF was higher in 19 children with Haemophilus influenzae meningitis than in 17 controls (P less than .01) and correlated with bacterial density (P less than .01), CSF LPS (P less than .01), CSF TNF alpha levels (P less than .01), and the Herson-Todd severity score (P less than .01). Elevated CSF TNF alpha and PAF are often present in children with BM and are associated with seizures and severity of disease. Detectable CSF TNF alpha appears to distinguish BM from
viral meningitis
.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid cachectin/tumor necrosis factor-alpha and platelet-activating factor concentrations and severity of bacterial meningitis in children. 201 66
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of ciprofloxacin (Ciprobay) were measured by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) in 20 patients with varying degrees of meningeal inflammation. Underlying clinical syndromes were
viral meningitis
(n = 10), convalescent phase of acute
bacterial meningitis
(n = 9), and acute phase of
bacterial meningitis
(n = 1). CSF concentrations following an intravenous dose of 200 mg ranged between 0.028 and 0.11 mg/l (5.8-26.8% of corresponding serum levels) in patients with
viral meningitis
, and between 0.049 and 0.389 mg/l (5.9-77.0% of corresponding serum levels) in patients with
bacterial meningitis
. Taken together with the findings of other authors, the results indicate a potential usefulness of ciprofloxacin as an alternative agent for treatment of meningitis due to susceptible gram-negative microorganisms.
...
PMID:Penetration of ciprofloxacin into the spinal fluid in patients with viral and bacterial meningitis. 238 6
Cerebrospinal fluid C-reactive protein (CSF-CRP) was studied in 183 consecutive infants and children with suspected meningitis, using a nephelometric technique. Cerebrospinal fluid C-reactive protein was above an empirically chosen level of 1 mg/1 in seven of 19 children with culture-proven
bacterial meningitis
, in only one of 15 children with
viral meningitis
, and three of 139 children with no meningitis. All 10 children with partially treated meningitis had CSF-CRP levels below 1 mg/1. There was good correlation between CSF-CRP and total protein levels in children with
bacterial meningitis
(R value 0.4999 P less than 0.05). The test was not sensitive enough for early differentiation between bacterial and
viral meningitis
. The test also did not add extra information regarding aetiology in partially treated meningitis.
...
PMID:Evaluation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) C-reactive protein in the diagnosis of suspected meningitis. 242 90
Alpha-1-antitrypsin (A-1-AT) and A-1-AT-elastase complex levels in cerebrospinal fluid have been evaluated in 11 children with
viral meningitis
(VM), 14 with
bacterial meningitis
(BM), 10 with tuberculous meningitis (TBM) and 10 investigated for, but found not to have meningitis (NM). A-1-AT concentrations in the NM group were lower than in the BM group (P = 0.0002) and the TBM group (P = 0.0005) but did not differ from the concentrations in VM; those in the VM group were lower than in the BM group (P = 0.0001) and the TBM group (P = 0.003) but no difference was found between the BM and TBM groups. A-1-AT-elastase complex concentrations in CSF were lower in the NM group than the BM group (P = 0.0001) or the TBM group (P = 0.0089), however those in the BM group were significantly higher than in the TBM group (P = 0.0001). A significant correlation existed in CSF between the protein concentrations and neutrophil counts as well as the A-1-AT and A-1-AT-elastase complex concentrations.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid alpha-1-antitrypsin alpha-1-antitrypsin-elastase complex levels in meningitis. 249 58
Urinary excretion rates of antidiuretic hormone were determined by radioimmunoassay in children with bacterial (6) and viral (11) meningitis, and in children with other febrile illnesses (7). These values were compared to normal data obtained from 50 healthy, normally hydrated children ranging in age from 1 week to 9 years. Plasma sodium concentrations were measured in the sick children; urine osmolality and creatinine concentrations were measured in all children. Upon admission, all children with
bacterial meningitis
and 64% of those with
viral meningitis
had urinary antidiuretic hormone excretion rates greater than 2 S.D. above values obtained from age-matched controls. Fifty-seven percent of children with other febrile illnesses had similarly elevated antidiuretic hormone values; however, only in the bacterial and
viral meningitis
groups were antidiuretic hormone excretion rates inappropriate because they occurred when serum sodium concentrations were found to be normal or low normal (i.e., 136 +/- 2 mEq/L and 137 +/- 1 mEq/L, respectively). The average serum sodium in the group with other febrile illnesses was higher (146 +/- 5 mEq/L; p less than 0.05) and could represent an appropriate stimulus for antidiuretic hormone release. In spite of high levels of antidiuretic hormone, most
viral meningitis
patients did not concentrate their urine, probably because all except 2 were younger than 2 months of age. We conclude that
viral meningitis
, like
bacterial meningitis
, frequently is associated with inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion; however, most children with
viral meningitis
may be protected from developing hyponatremia because of their inability to concentrate their urine.
...
PMID:Inappropriate antidiuretic hormone in children with viral meningitis. 271 37
A retrospective study of 72 infants under four weeks of age with meningitis evaluated over almost four years was performed to determine the predictive value of the CBC differential ratio (% lymphocytes + % monocytes/% polymorphonuclear leukocytes + % band forms) profile in distinguishing those with bacterial from those with a nonbacterial etiology. Of 18 neonates with
bacterial meningitis
, all had a radio lower than one; of 54 neonates with aseptic or
viral meningitis
, 46 (85%) had a ratio greater than one. The difference between mean ratio values of the two groups was highly significant (P less than 0.001). A CBC differential ratio less than one was more sensitive (100%) in initially identifying neonates with
bacterial meningitis
than were other traditionally utilized parameters, eg, presence of fever (50%), ill appearance (50%), hypoglycorrhachia (61%), elevated CSF protein (55%), or CSF Gram-stained smear revealing pathogenic organisms (45%). Statistical analysis revealed that a CBC differential ratio less than 1.5 will accurately predict all cases of neonatal
bacterial meningitis
with a confidence of 99.95%. The CBC differential ratio is an accurate index for distinguishing neonates with
bacterial meningitis
from those with nonbacterial meningitis. Utilization of this parameter in conjunction with other traditional factors is efficacious in predicting outcome.
...
PMID:CBC differential profile in distinguishing etiology of neonatal meningitis. 274 13
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