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

We analyzed data from the records of 422 patients with acute bacterial or viral meningitis. A cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) glucose level less than 1.9 mmol/L, a CSF-blood glucose ratio less than 0.23, a CSF protein level greater than 2.2 g/L, more than 2000 x 10(6)/L CSF leukocytes, or more than 1180 x 10(6)/L CSF polymorphonuclear leukocytes were individual predictors of bacterial infection with 99% certainty or better. Although any one of these tests could rule in bacterial meningitis with high probability, none could rule it out. To better predict whether a patient has bacterial vs viral infection, we developed a logistic multiple regression model using CSF-blood glucose ratio, total polymorphonuclear leukocyte count in CSF, age, and month of onset. This proved highly reliable when validated in an independent test sample, with an area under receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.97. The model should allow physicians to differentiate between acute viral and acute bacterial meningitis with greater accuracy.
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PMID:Differential diagnosis of acute meningitis. An analysis of the predictive value of initial observations. 281 Jun 3

During a one year period tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) was prospectively determined in the cerebrospinal fluid of 49 patients with infectious meningitis. TNF-alpha was found in the cerebrospinal fluid of 15 of 18 patients with bacterial meningitis. In 11 patients who had cerebrospinal fluid positive for TNF-alpha it was detected in only one serum (in low concentration). There was no significant correlation between the concentration of TNF-alpha in cerebrospinal fluid and the patient's age, duration of illness and fever, body temperature, and serum C reactive protein. However, cerebrospinal fluid protein concentrations of greater than or equal to 2 g/l and leucocyte values of greater than or equal to 2.5 X 10(9)/l were more often associated with high TNF-alpha concentrations (greater than or equal to 500 pg/ml). In contrast with bacterial meningitis, none of the 31 samples of cerebrospinal fluid from patients with viral meningitis was positive for TNF-alpha. Thus this investigation supports the conclusion, drawn from animal studies on TNF-alpha in the cerebrospinal fluid, that the presence of TNF-alpha is indicative of bacterial meningitis. Absence of TNF-alpha cerebrospinal fluid, however, was found here not to exclude a bacterial aetiology of the infection.
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PMID:Tumour necrosis factor-alpha in infectious meningitis. 281 47

Cells containing immunoglobulins G, A, and M were evaluated in paired cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and peripheral blood (PB) samples. These were obtained from 12 patients with bacterial meningitis, 14 patients with viral meningitis, 6 cases of lymphocytic meningoradiculitis (LMR), 10 cases of multiple sclerosis (MS), 6 cases of herpes zoster ganglionitis and 27 patients with non-infectious disorders of the CNS. PB cells from 20 healthy donors served as controls. Using alkaline phosphatase (AP)-conjugated antibodies to human immunoglobulin (Ig) G, A, and M in a carrageenan solution it was possible to demonstrate repeatedly intracytoplasmic Igs over more than 1 year without any detectable loss of specificity and staining intensity. Immunoglobulin-containing cells (ICC) could be detected in the CSF of 96% of patients with inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system (CNS) or with MS but not in the control cases.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical analysis of immunoglobulin-containing cells in CSF and blood in inflammatory disorders of the central nervous system. 317 97

Cerebrospinal fluid lysozyme (CSF-LZM) concentrations were determined in 62 controls, 28 viral meningitis and 22 bacterial meningitis, as compared to CSF lactic acid routinely used. CSF-LZM measurement was performed by a rapid turbidimetric assay which required 50 microliters CSF only. The mean CSF-LZM concentration of the control group was 0.23 mg/l, the highest value being 0.65 mg/l. The mean LZM levels in viral meningitis were 1.10 mg/l, never exceeding 3 mg/l. The range of pretreatment LZM levels in bacterial meningitis was 7.2 to 65 mg/l and above 3 mg/l in all cases 48 h after treatment. On the 6th day after admission, 12 of 16 samples showed abnormal values. The CSF-LZM assay seems to be of more value than that of lactic acid. Thus, before treatment, LZM concentrations were 10 to 100 fold higher than that of the normal values, with persistent high levels on the 2nd and even on the 6th day of treatment (whereas lactic acid values were all normal on day 6).
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PMID:[Cerebrospinal fluid lysozyme in meningitis in children. Value in establishing the etiologic diagnosis]. 324 42

This study was conducted to demonstrate that experienced pediatricians using standard clinical indications for performing a lumbar puncture should have a higher yield of positive spinal taps than previously reported and also can detect bacterial meningitis. These indicators included temperature elevation, inability to be consoled, level of alertness, nuchal rigidity, bulging fontanel, decreased appetite, rash, referral, and febrile seizures. Eighty-two of 381 (22%) lumbar punctures were positive for pleocytosis and/or organisms. Patients were divided into two groups, consisting of those with one indicator (low risk) and those with greater than one indicator (high risk). Thirteen of 14 patients with bacterial meningitis were placed in the high risk group. The single patient in the low risk group had been pretreated with antibiotics. The positive predictive value in bacterial meningitis for a score greater than one was 5%. The average number of clinical indicators in bacterial meningitis was 3.7, versus 2.4 in viral meningitis and 1.6 without meningitis. These findings suggest that, in the absence of prior antibiotic therapy, an experienced pediatrician can clinically detect patients at high risk for bacterial meningitis. Nonbacterial meningitis cannot be as readily detected clinically.
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PMID:Clinical indicators for lumbar puncture. 336 36

To evaluate the potential role of cachectin/TNF-alpha in the pathogenesis of bacterial and viral meningitis, concentrations and kinetics of TNF-alpha were determined in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). After intracerebral, but not systemic, infection with Listeria monocytogenes in mice, TNF-alpha was detected as early as 3 h after infection reaching maximum titers after 24 h. However, TNF-alpha was not found in serum during the course of Listeria infection. In contrast to bacterial meningitis, no TNF-alpha was detected at any time in CSF of mice suffering from severe lymphocytic choriomeningitis induced by intracerebral infection with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. This difference is striking since both model infections led to a massive infiltration of polymorphonuclear and mononuclear leukocytes into the meninges and CSF. The results found for the two model infections were paralleled by findings in humans; CSF from three out of three patients with bacterial meningitis examined during the first day of hospitalization showed significant levels of TNF-alpha; none of the CSF obtained later than 3 d after hospitalization was positive. In addition, similarly to what was found in mice with viral meningitis, zero out of seven patients with viral meningitis had detectable TNF-alpha in CSF.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor alpha in cerebrospinal fluid during bacterial, but not viral, meningitis. Evaluation in murine model infections and in patients. 336 98

The blood/cerebrospinal fluid bromide ratio is sensitive and specific in the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis (TBM). Blood/CSF chloride (Cl-) ratios were not found to be useful in differentiating between TBM and viral and acute bacterial meningitis in 59 black children. In a study of 148 children with bacterial or viral meningitis or TBM, the majority (112) had CSF Cl- levels below the lower limit of normal. Accordingly, CSF and blood Cl- levels and the blood/CSF Cl- ratio were not found to be useful in differentiating between TBM, acute bacterial meningitis and viral meningitis.
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PMID:Chloride levels in meningitis. 337 41

The authors have determined quantitatively the reactive C-protein in the serum of twenty patients suffering from acute bacterial meningitis and ten patients suffering from viral meningitis. The values observed, that are higher significantly in the bacterial meningitis, permit to affirm that reactive C-protein is an useful test in the differential diagnosis between bacterial and viral meningitis.
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PMID:[C-reactive protein in the differential diagnosis of infectious meningitis]. 344 88

The value of phosphohexose isomerase (EC 5.3.1.9) determination in the CSF in the diagnosis of meningitis was tested under routine conditions. In 48 patients with untreated bacterial meningitis, enzyme activity concentrations between 40 and 2335 U/l were measured, whereas the highest phosphohexose isomerase activity concentration in 92 patients with viral meningitis was 34 U/l. Lysis of the CSF leukocytes with Triton X-100 resulted in a substantial increase of phosphohexose isomerase activity. In bacterial meningitis these values increased to 200 to 7000 U/l, but remained under 150 U/l in viral meningitis. The raised enzyme activities are derived from the leukocytes and appear to reflect their functional and metabolic state. The information provided by the leukocyte morphology can thus be appreciably extended by phosphohexose isomerase determination.
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PMID:Clinical significance and source of raised catalytic activities of phosphohexose isomerase in the CSF in meningitis. 355 79

The zone immunoelectrophoresis assay (ZIA) for C-reactive protein (CRP) determinations is easy to perform and requires only small amount of antiserum, e.g., 25-100 and 0.5-1.0 microliter anti-CRP antibody/20 serum and CSF samples, respectively. For quantitating CSF-CRP the immunoprecipitates formed were stained using alkaline phosphatase-conjugated secondary antibodies and the lowest standard concentration used was 30 micrograms/l. The immunoprecipitates formed when measuring CRP in serum were stained by Coomasie brilliant blue R250 with a detection limit of about 300 micrograms/l. CRP was determined in cerebrospinal fluid in 27 patients with bacterial meningitis (range less than 0.03-23.0 mg/l) and in 25 patients with viral meningitis (range less than 0.03-0.23 mg/l). CRP was quantitated in 52 sera by both the CRP ZIA method (y) and by electroimmunoassay (x). The correlation coefficient was r = 0.992 with the regression line y = 1.024 x + 0.855.
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PMID:Quantitation of C-reactive protein in cerebrospinal fluid and serum by zone immunoelectrophoresis assay (ZIA). 359 96


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