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)

Viral meningitis are the most frequent cause of clear cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) meningitis and are usually benign. The viral nature is suggested by clinical arguments (context, associated manifestations) and particularly the analysis of CSF, typically lymphocytic. However, problems of CSF interpretation may occur during the polymorphonuclear reaction at the beginning of such meningitis and after elevated protein or low glucose concentration. The main differential diagnosis are: partially treated bacterial meningitis, the beginning of meningococcal meningitis, listeriosis or tuberculous meningitis which need and urgent and specific treatment. The most common agents are the enteroviruses. The etiology can only be detected through careful virological investigations. These studies may be useful in outbreaks or in epidemiological studies.
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PMID:[Acute viral meningitis]. 798 16

Interferon (IFN)-gamma was analysed immunologically in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sampled in the acute phase from 27 patients (15-66 years) with viral meningitis and from 18 patients (0.5-90 years) with bacterial meningitis. Increased CSF concentrations were observed in 19/27 viral and in 13/18 bacterial cases. CSF-IFN-gamma did not distinguish between viral and bacterial meningitis. Five of 8 patients with meningitis due to herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) had CSF-IFN-gamma levels above the highest found in enteroviral meningitis. Thus, a markedly increased CSF-IFN-gamma value in patients with suspected viral meningitis ought to indicate HSV-2 etiology. The patients with Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis (6 adults and 1 child) had significantly higher levels than the 7 children with Haemophilus influenzae meningitis. This may indicate that S. pneumoniae induces more IFN-gamma secretion than H. influenzae, and/or that during meningitis, adults are more apt to react with IFN-gamma production, than are children.
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PMID:Interferon-gamma in cerebrospinal fluid from patients with viral and bacterial meningitis. 803 69

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of C-reactive protein (CRP), tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF), interleukin-6 (IL-6), total protein (TP) and white cell count with differential (WCC) have been measured in 24 patients presenting with acute bacterial or viral meningitis and also in a non-infected, non-inflamed control group (n = 24). In acute viral meningitis, CRP levels were not raised when compared to controls and there was a discordance between high levels of the primary inflammatory mediators (IL-6 and TNF) and the low measured CRP levels. CRP levels were raised in cases of bacterial meningitis. A concentration of 100 ng/mL CRP had a sensitivity of 87% for bacterial meningitis. TNF concentrations in the CSF were significantly raised in cases of acute bacterial meningitis (P < 0.001). Smaller but variable elevations were seen in the patients with acute viral meningitis. One patient, who succumbed to bacterial infection, showed low CSF levels of CRP, TNF and WCC but an elevated IL-6 concentration. Another, presenting with low CSF WCC, had raised concentrations of CRP, TNF and IL-6 which pointed to the correct diagnosis of acute bacterial meningitis. The development of methods yielding rapid analysis for these cytokines together with a sensitive assay for CRP in CSF would be a useful adjunct to conventional investigation.
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PMID:The use of cytokine and C-reactive protein measurements in cerebrospinal fluid during acute infective meningitis. 806 66

A soluble form of the intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (sICAM-1) was measured in paired cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)/blood samples from 123 patients with different neurological diseases. Mean levels of circulating ICAM-1 in the blood were mean +/- SD = 423 +/- 184.6 ng ml-1 (range 44-1115 ng ml-1). Considerable differences of sICAM-1 in the CSF of patients were observed between disease groups. In acute bacterial meningitis, sICAM-1 levels as high as 1/5 of the serum concentration were detected in the CSF (n = 24; mean +/- SD = 33.0 +/- 23.7 ng ml-1; range: 4.8-93.9 ng ml-1). These changes coincided with a severe blood-CSF barrier dysfunction as indicated by a high CSF/blood ratio for albumin (mean +/- SD = 46.7 +/- 52.2; range: 16.8-249.3). In patients with polyradiculitis (n = 9; mean +/- SD = 14.5 +/- 11.9 ng ml-1; range: 2.6-43.7 ng ml-1) a similar covariation between the albumin and sICAM CSF/blood ratios was detected. In patients with multiple sclerosis (n = 9; mean +/- SD = 5 +/- 4.3; range: 0-12.7 ng ml-1) or HIV infection with neurological symptoms (n = 18; mean +/- SD = 4.9 +/- 3.2; range; 1-11.9 ng ml-1) low levels of sICAM-1 were detected in the CSF associated with intact blood-CSF barrier function in most patients. Among 13 patients with viral meningitis, only four had detectable levels of sICAM-1 in their CSF (mean +/- SD = 1.0 +/- 1.5 ng ml-1; range: 0-3.7).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1 in cerebrospinal fluid: an indicator for the inflammatory impairment of the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier. 810 75

The proton magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) spectra were obtained from 38 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from 34 patients with various central nervous system (CNS) diseases and the H2O signals were reduced by the presaturation method. A doublet signal for CH3 protons of lactate, as well as a singlet one for alpha-CH proton of glucose, were clearly detected in all the spectra obtained. The relative lactate concentration values were calculated on the basis of the glucose concentrations which had been measured by a routine laboratory method in the hospital and the ratios of the peak heights (lactate CH3/glucose alpha-CH). In the CSF samples examined, the relative lactate values semi-quantitatively determined in this way were clearly elevated in cerebral infarction and bacterial meningitis, but not in other disorders including viral meningitis. On the other hand, one CSF component whose enhancement was found only in a sample from a hepatic encephalitis patient was identified as glutamine from the double quantum filtered-shift correlation spectrum. These results suggest that 1H-NMR spectroscopy of CSF can become a powerful aid in biochemical diagnosis of CNS diseases.
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PMID:Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy of cerebrospinal fluid as an aid in neurological diagnosis. 814 94

The diagnostic value of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) ferritin was assessed in 30 patients with meningeal reaction (viral meningitis 10; bacterial meningitis 6; meningism 14) and in 37 patients with cerebrovascular disease (cerebral infarction 29; transient ischaemic attacks 4; cerebral haemorrhage 4). The control group comprised 13 subjects with minor neurological disorders. CSF-ferritin levels were not significantly different in the various subgroups, most patients having values within the normal reference interval (2-7 micrograms/l). A clearly elevated CSF-ferritin was seen in one patient with bacterial meningitis and in one patient with intraventricular bleeding. In patients with meningeal reaction, CSF-ferritin was significantly correlated to CSF-protein. Patients with cerebrovascular disease displayed significant correlations between CSF-albumin and CSF-IgG and between CSF-ferritin, CSF-albumin and CSF-IgG. The present study indicates that measurement of CSF-ferritin is of no practical clinical relevance in the evaluation of patients with meningeal reaction and cerebrovascular disease.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid ferritin in patients with meningitis and cerebral infarction or bleeding. 822 69

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neopterin levels were determined by RIA in individuals with central nervous system (CNS) or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections and in healthy controls. The mean CSF neopterin concentrations were 63.0 nmol/L in 15 patients with acute bacterial meningitis, 54.9 nmol/L in 15 patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis, 32.5 nmol/L in 10 patients with viral meningitis, 130.9 nmol/L in 8 patients with viral encephalitis, 13.9 nmol/L in 15 patients with asymptomatic HIV infection, 26.0 nmol/L in 11 patients with AIDS without dementia, 65.4 nmol/L in 4 patients with AIDS dementia, and 4.2 nmol/L in 24 healthy controls. Although patients with viral encephalitis had higher mean neopterin levels than any other patient category studied, the CSF neopterin concentrations cannot be used to discriminate between viral and bacterial infections. Analysis of CSF levels of neopterin may be useful as guidance in following clinical course and effect of treatment and can provide information of value in addition to CSF cell count as a measurement of CNS immune stimulation.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid neopterin concentrations in central nervous system infection. 822 65

The release of agents mediating inflammation in meningitis may bring about neuronal hypoxia, under which circumstances ATP concentrations decrease and its degradation products increase and are released into the cerebrospinal fluid. In this study of alterations in neuronal energy metabolism in meningitis, AMP, IMP, inosine, adenosine, guanosine, adenine, guanine, hypoxanthine, xanthine and urate were determined by high performance liquid chromatography in the cerebrospinal fluid of 54 children aged between 1 month and 13 years suffering from meningitis (25 viral, 24 bacterial and 5 tuberculous cases) and 63 controls. Compared to the controls, patients with viral meningitis exhibited high concentrations of IMP, adenosine, guanosine, adenine, guanine and xanthine; patients with bacterial meningitis exhibited high concentrations of IMP, inosine, guanosine, adenosine, hypoxanthine, xanthine and urate; and patients with tuberculous meningitis exhibited high concentrations of AMP, guanosine, xanthine and urate. Viral and bacterial cases did not differ significantly for any of the metabolites studied. AMP and urate concentrations were significantly higher in patients with tuberculous cases compared with viral or bacterial meningitis cases.
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PMID:Concentrations of nucleotides, nucleosides, purine bases and urate in cerebrospinal fluid of children with meningitis. 824 44

Concentrations of unconjugated pteridines (neopterin, monapterin, biopterin, pterin) were measured in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 310 patients, using a high performance liquid chromatography (HPCL) method. Our cohort included 209 controls (C), 15 patients with meningism (M), 22 with viral meningitis (VM), 17 with bacterial meningitis (BM), 9 with herpetic meningoencephalitis (HME), 2 with tuberculous meningoencephalitis (TME) and 36 with peripheral systemic infections (PI). These measurements, expressed as nmol/litre, showed a gradation of neopterin concentrations according to the type of infection: 20.1 + 6.5 in group C; 46.9 +/- 29.9 in group PI; 274.3 +/- 231.7 in group VM; 699.2 +/- 711.2 in group BM, 1,101.9 +/- 1,107.9 in group HME and 1,169 +/- 1,171.9 in group TME. There was no such gradation with biopterin. Comparisons of means showed that total concentrations in the pathology groups were very different from those observed in controls and in the neuromeningeal infections of the PI group. There was no correlation between the number of lymphocytes and the concentrations of neopterin or biopterin in the CSF. It is concluded that the concentration of neopterin in the CSF is a sensitive but little specific marker of infection, independent of CSF cellular reaction. Measuring this concentration makes it possible: 1) to evaluate the status of immune defences; 2) to predict that a meningitis will become chronic, and 3) to detect a possible parenchymal participation in a meningeal infection.
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PMID:[Unconjugated pteridines and neuromeningeal infections]. 827 28

The ability of serum C-reactive protein (S-CRP) to differentiate between acute bacterial and viral meningitis was evaluated in 235 patients, both children and adults. The patients underwent lumbar puncture due to suspected central nervous system (CNS) infection. In patients with bacterial meningitis, 7/60 (12%) had S-CRP concentrations below 50 mg/l. Of these patients, 4 were children below 6 years of age, all with symptoms of meningitis for less than 12 h before admission and 3 adults of whom 1 had symptoms of meningitis for less than 12 h. In patients with viral meningitis, 15/146 (10%) had S-CRP concentrations above 50 mg/l. Only 3 children below 6 years of age with viral meningitis had S-CRP concentration above 20 mg/l, but none exceeded 50 mg/l. An S-CRP value above 50 mg/l in patients with CSF pleocytosis usually indicates bacterial etiology. However, S-CRP values above 50 mg/l may occasionally be seen in viral meningitis. In children younger than 6 years of age a discriminatory level for S-CRP of 20 mg/l can be used to distinguish between bacterial and viral meningitis, but for older patients a discriminatory level of 50 mg/l is more appropriate. If the duration of the illness is less than 12 h, S-CRP concentrations below the discriminatory levels are of limited diagnostic value.
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PMID:Serum C-reactive protein in the differential diagnosis of acute meningitis. 828 48


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