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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (
bacterial meningitis
)
4,038
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) activity was measured in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with acute bacterial or viral meningitis and in AIDS patients with various cerebral disorders. Increased levels of IL-6 were detected in the CSF of patients with
bacterial meningitis
. On the contrary, most of the samples from patients with viral meningitis (predominantly caused by
mumps
virus) had no detectable IL-6 activity in CSF. A moderate increase of IL-6 levels was detected in the CSF of AIDS patients with AIDS dementia complex (ADC), progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy and cerebral toxoplasmosis. Moreover, higher levels of IL-6 were detected in the CSF of patients with cryptococcal meningitis. We conclude that the initial events of CSF inflammation in patients with acute viral meningitis are different from those in patients with acute
bacterial meningitis
, and the role of IL-6 is less critical to the process.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid levels of IL-6 in patients with acute infections of the central nervous system. 128 13
In this study, adenosine deaminase (ADA) levels of serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in a total 28 children (13 with
bacterial meningitis
, 5 with
mumps
meningoencephalitis and 10 with febrile convulsions) were determined. The comparisons between the serum values were insignificant (p greater than 0.05) but the CSF levels of the children with
bacterial meningitis
were higher than in the others (p less than 0.05). These findings suggest that serum ADA levels are not important in the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of these diseases. However, ADA levels of CSF may be useful in differentiating between bacterial and viral meningitis.
...
PMID:The value of CSF adenosine deaminase levels in the differential diagnosis of childhood meningitis. 144 Sep 56
On June 13, 1991, President George Bush announced in a White House ceremony a local planning effort to break down barriers and provide better access to immunization in six representative localities "to solve the problem of late immunization." (children need to be immunized appropriately by their second birthday, not just in time for school.). The community "Immunization Action Plans" (IAP) are one of several Federal, State, and local responses to an outbreak of measles that produced 27,600 cases and 89 deaths in 1990. The community effort and subsequent early childhood immunization plans around the country are also part of a much broader effort initiated by Secretary Sullivan as a Healthy People Year 2000 goal to increase immunization levels to at least 90 percent for the nation's children by their second birthday. These efforts also respond to 13 recommendations for improving immunization availability made by the National Vaccine Advisory Committee in January 1991. The recommendations focused on improvements in the management of immunization delivery and in methods for measuring immunization status, increasing appropriate consumer demand, and other prevention needs. Although measles prompted the action, the immunization initiative is aimed also at eight other communicable childhood diseases--diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis or whooping cough, poliomyelitis,
mumps
, rubella, and Haemophilus influenza type b that causes
bacterial meningitis
, and hepatitis B. Details are described of the immunization action plans developed by Dallas, TX; Maricopa County (Phoenix), AZ; South Dakota; Detroit, MI; San Diego, CA; and Philadelphia, PA, to ensure that children are fully immunized not just by the time they enter school but by age 2 years. The six were chosen by the Centers for Disease Control as representative of many without adequate childhood immunization coverage.
...
PMID:Six areas lead national early immunization drive. 159 33
Cases of non-
bacterial meningitis
being hospitalized at the Children's Hospital of the University of Bochum in the years 1971 to 1985 were analysed retrospectively according to etiological and epidemiological aspects. Altogether 620 non-bacterial cases of meningitis were included in this study. For 378 (60.9%) children the infecting agent could be identified while in 242 cases (39.1%) the etiology remained open. In 237 cases enterovirus had been the causative agent. The average age of the patients was 6.5 years, boys were more frequently involved than girls (65% versus 35%). The majority of enterovirus infections occurred during the summer months July to September whereas (
mumps
) parotitis infections were equally distributed over the whole year. Yearly increases in certain enterovirus types were correlated to an increase in ECHO 11-infections in 1982, Coxsackie B5-infection in 1983 and 84 and ECHO 7-infection in 1985 based on data from the whole Federal Republic of Germany. However the majority of enterovirus-caused meningitis occurred during local endemics.
...
PMID:[Results of virologic studies in 620 children with abacterial meningitis over a 15-year period (1971-1985)]. 303 66
Audiometric examination of children who have suffered a
bacterial meningitis
show that in about a quarter of them a moderate to severe, often unilateral, hearing loss is to be expected despite antibiotic treatment. Hearing loss is more frequent in cases of severe meningitis and appears to depend upon the time of treatment. The most feared infection is that due to Hemophilus influenzae. No hearing damage was encountered in meningitis due to virus, in confirmed
mumps
infection or when the CSF was free of bacteria.
...
PMID:[Hearing damage following meningitis then and now]. 361 Jun 79
All types of central nervous system (CNS) infections were investigated in a 1966 birth cohort of 12,000 children from Northern Finland followed up from birth to the age of 14. 174 CNS infections occurred in 167 children, 110 boys and 64 girls. The annual incidence of bacterial CNS infections was 36.3/100,000 and that of viral infections 688.0/100 000. It is concluded that bacterial CNS infections were recorded very fully but only 2/3 of the viral infections could be traced, even though the more severe cases were quite well documented. 8/55 children (14.5%) with
bacterial meningitis
died; the corresponding figure for viral encephalitis and meningitis (excluding
mumps
) was 3/67 (4.5%). 17/55 (30.9%) developed mental retardation, epilepsy, cerebral palsy or hearing defect or some combination of these after bacterial CNS infection, and 9 (8.1%) after viral infection. The difference with respect to the children who had not experienced CNS infection was statistically significant only for the bacterial infection cases. CNS infections explained 7.6% of all deaths from 28 days to 14 years, 3% of the handicapping cases of cerebral palsy, mental retardation and epilepsy or some combination of these, and 6.6% of the hearing defects.
...
PMID:Incidence and prognosis of central nervous system infections in a birth cohort of 12,000 children. 376 48
Viral meningitis is part of the aseptic meningitis syndrome but must be distinguished from
bacterial meningitis
on the basis of a careful examination of the CSF and sound clinical judgment. Enteroviruses probably account for the bulk of cases of aseptic meningitis that occur in the United States and which are reported to the Centers for Disease Control each year. The seasonal pattern in the incidence of aseptic meningitis is largely due to the seasonal variation of enteroviral infections. Early on, the CSF in patients with viral meningitis frequently contains a predominance of polymorphonuclear leukocytes and may even have a low glucose level. The presence of neutrophils in the initial CSF sample is especially common in patients with enteroviral infections. A CSF glucose level lower than 50 per cent of a simultaneously drawn blood glucose determination is not uncommon in patients with viral meningitis due to
mumps
, LCM, and herpes simplex. In a patient with a predominance of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the initial CSF specimen and in whom a viral infection is suspected, antibiotics may be withheld if a spinal tap is repeated within 12 hours. A shift from polymorphonuclear leukocytes to mononuclear cells makes viral meningitis the likely diagnosis. Both herpes simplex and varicella-zoster may infect the meninges by means of spread from cervical and dorsal root ganglia in a retrograde fashion much the way they spread in an antegrade fashion to the skin. HSV-2 is more likely to cause the clinical syndrome of viral meningitis, while HSV-1 is more likely to cause a meningoencephalitis with serious brain dysfunction. The identification of a specific viral agent in body fluids, especially the CSF, in a patient with aseptic meningitis is of more than academic interest, since it can shorten duration of hospital stay and eliminate unnecessary antimicrobial therapy. The diagnosis of enteroviral infections depends upon the isolation of a virus from CSF, stool, or throat plus a fourfold antibody response in the serum to the viral isolate. The 60-odd serotypes of enterovirus, each with different antigenic determinants, preclude serologic testing alone as a useful diagnostic test to identify the patient infected with coxsackievirus or echovirus. For infections, due to herpes simplex, varicella-zoster, LCM, and arboviruses, a serologic test alone can be useful.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Viral meningitis. 399 Apr 41
The aetiology of central nervous system infections was surveyed in a study at Aurora Hospital, Helsinki, in 1980. Of the 146 patients with central nervous system infections, 113 had aseptic meningitis, 23 bacterial and one tuberculous meningitis, and nine meningoencephalitis or encephalitis. The probable aetiology of aseptic meningitis was established in 67% of the 106 patients properly tested, the commonest agents being
mumps
(27%), Coxsackie (24%) and ECHO (9%) viruses. Haemophilus influenza type b was the most frequent cause of
bacterial meningitis
(39%), occurring solely among infants and young children. There were no cases due to Neisseria meningitidis group A, which used earlier to be epidemic in Finland. The incidences of aseptic, bacterial and tuberculous meningitis in Helsinki in 1980 (based on a total of 174 patients treated in the three hospitals admitting patients with central nervous system infections) were 26.7, 5.2 and 0.2 cases per 100,100 annually, and those of encephalitides and myelitis 3.5 and 0.6 cases per 100,000 annually.
...
PMID:The incidence and aetiology of central nervous system infections in Helsinki in 1980. 714 95
Two children developed
bacterial meningitis
within five days of measles-
mumps
-rubella (MMR) immunisation. Diagnosis was delayed because symptoms were attributed to the vaccine, although both had a raised C-reactive protein. Fever or rash within five days of MMR vaccination are unlikely to be due to the vaccine and a raised C-reactive protein suggests bacterial infection.
...
PMID:Bacterial meningitis after MMR immunisation. 855 41
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