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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (bacterial meningitis)
4,038 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although cerebral angiography should be approached with caution in the diagnosis of inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease there are some characteristic angiographic findings which may be helpful for classification and differential diagnosis. The proximal cerebral arteries are favourably affected by basal meningitis and thrombangiitis obliterans with resulting stenoses and occlusions. Whereas those inflammations originating from neighbouring skull structures mostly involve the intracavernous parts of the carotid artery, the tuberculous and mycotic arteritis prefer the supraclinoid carotid siphon. Peripheral vascular changes are found in luetic endangiitis, necrotizing and toxic angiitis and in collagenoses. Simultaneous involvement of the temporal arteries is of great diagnostic importance demonstrating the systemic character of the inflammatory process; in Horton's arteritis it can be a pathognomonic finding. Infectious endocarditis, some mycoses and malaria may lead to embolic occlusion of cerebral vessels. Mycotic aneurysms mostly have a broad base or a fusiform shape and do not prefer the localizations of congenital aneurysms. Angiographically, abscesses, tuberculomas and viral encephalitis may result in circumscribed hypervascularized areas. The characteristic angiographic findings are exemplified and discussed on the basis of 8 cases of inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease (tuberculosis, pneumococcal and unspecific bacterial meningitis, syphilis, mycosis, Takayasu-syndrome, panarteritis nodosa, temporal arteritis).
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PMID:[Inflammatory cerebro-vascular disease: angiographic findings and distribution patterns (author's transl)]. 0 27

The presence of antigen of D. pneumoniae and H. influenzae was detected by counter-immunoelectrophoresis (CIE) in 113 LCR of children with central nervous system (CNS) infection (17 viral, 70 bacterial and 6 tuberculous). From 41 normal children spinal fluid was obtained and used as control. Precipitation band was not observed in normal children cases of viral and tuberculosis meningitis. In 21 cases of bacterial meningitis, D. pneumoniae and H. influenzae was isolated in six cases each. In six cases of bacterial meningitis were positive both bacteriological study and CIE. In 49 cases in which culture was negative only 13 gave positive CIE. When other strains of bacteria were isolated, no positive band was detected with CIE. This technic was regarded as useful for detecting etiologic agent in purulent meningitis.
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PMID:[Counter-immunoelectrophoresis in the diagnosis of meningoencephalitis by Diplococcus pneumoniae and Hemophilus influenzae]. 0 42

Necrotizing angiitis or vasculitis exhibits a wide clinical spectrum characterized by many different cutaneous manifestations. Diagnosis must be confirmed by histopathology. We studied in retrospect 25 patients whose conditions had been diagnosed by skin biopsy. Histologic examination revealed infiltration by polynuclear cells and fibrinoid necrosis of the walls of the blood vessels in the skin. The great variety of clinical manifestations and etiologies stands out in a review of the records of these patients. Necrotizing angiitis has been found associated with mixed cryoglobulinemia; administration of drugs, milliary tuberculosis, bacterial meningitis, rickettsiosis, staphylococcal sepsis, pharyngotonsillitis, and rheumatoid arthritis. Necrotizing angiitis is a group of diseases with a great variety of clinical manifestations, ranging from benign to fatal. The various entities described to date have been more like different clinical forms of the same disease that distinct conditions. In cases of necrotizing angiitis caused by basically immunological mechanisms, the walls of the blood vessels may be impaired in varying diffuse degrees. The prognosis of the disease depends on the intensity of the inflammation and its repercussions on the parenchymas of different organs. The kidney is the most susceptible organ in this case. Treatment should be directed toward the avoidance of predisposing and etiologic factors, detection of the immunological reaction, requiring careful and individual attention in every case.
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PMID:[Necrotizing angiitis of small vessels. A clinical study of 25 patients with skin biopsy (author's transl)]. 3 57

An analysis of 219 confirmed cases of bacterial meningitis among Navajo Indians during a 5-year period, July 1, 1968, through June 30, 1973, revealed that 56 percent were caused by Haemophilus influenzae, 26 percent by Neisseria meningitidis, 6 percent by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and 6 percent by other organisms. The annual incidence of H. influenzae meningitis (17.7 per 100,000 persons) and that of pneumococcal meningitis (8.0 per 100,000) were much higher than the rates for these diseases reported from other population groups. The annual incidence of meningococcal meningitis (2.0 per 100,000) was similar to that found elsewhere. There was an ususual concentration of cases during the first year of life; 78 percent of H. influenzae, 64 percent of pneumococcal, and 50 percent of meningococcal meningitis occurred during this time. However, bacterial meningitis during the first month of life was not frequent (0.29 per 1,000 live births). Case fatality rates were similar to those reported for other population groups.
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PMID:Bacterial meningitis in Navojo Indians. 82 72

Four patients with acute paracoccidioidomycosis, hypoalbuminemia, ascites and associated infections are reported. They have been admitted to hospital 35 times, 4 of them due to active paracoccidioidomycosis, 14 to associated infections, 14 to ascites, edema and diarrhoea and 3 to herniorrhaphy. Two of them recovered after sepsis and central nervous system, muscular and subcutaneous cryptococcosis. The remaining two died. One had infectious diarrhoea (S. flexneri), peritoneal tuberculosis and sepsis (S. epidermidis); the other had bacterial meningitis, erysipelas, beta-hemolytic Streptococcus sepsis and miliary tuberculosis. Their immunodeficiency was attributed to enteric protein loss and/or malabsorption and malnutrition and was recognized by reduced response to delayed hypersensitivity skin tests in four patients and hypogammaglobulinemia in three of them. The authors discuss the need for prospective studies to be carried out, aiming at the mechanisms involved in secondary infections. Alternatives for maintaining the patients' adequate nutritional state should be investigated, to guarantee proper immune response and thus the ability to control intervening infections in patients with juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis.
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PMID:Immunodeficiency secondary to juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis: associated infections. 148 Feb 6

In infants and children, the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of drugs may differ considerably in comparison with these factors in adults; consequently, differences exist in therapeutic efficacy and toxicity of various antibiotic agents. Because of known toxicity, certain drugs--such as chloramphenicol in high doses, the sulfonamides, and tetracycline--should not be used in neonates. Antibiotic therapy should be modified in neonates because of biologic immaturity of organs important for the termination of drug action. Because of poor conjugation, inactivation, or excretion, the serum concentrations of many antibiotics may be higher and more prolonged in neonates than in older infants; thus, lower doses and longer intervals between administration may be necessary. In this article, we suggest dosages of antimicrobial agents for severe infections in children, older infants, and neonates. Included in the discussion are the cephalosporins, especially the third-generation cephalosporins that have assumed an important role in empiric treatment of bacterial meningitis in pediatric patients because of their ability to penetrate the central nervous system and their effectiveness against beta-lactamase-positive and negative strains of Haemophilus influenzae type b, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis, and many gram-negative bacteria in the Enterobacteriaceae group. In patients with congenital or acquired immunodeficiencies, antifungal, antiviral, or anti-Pneumocystis agents are often added to the antimicrobial regimen for severe infections. We review the agents available for such treatment in children, the drugs used for childhood tuberculosis, and certain new antibiotics (aztreonam, ticarcillin-clavulanate, ciprofloxacin, and imipenem-cilastatin) that have proved useful in select cases but whose precise role in pediatric practice will necessitate additional clinical experience.
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PMID:Antibiotic therapy for severe infections in infants and children. 173 93

Although intensive care medicine and chemotherapy of bacterial infections have made great progress during the last 30 years, therapeutic efficacy in bacterial meningitis in adult patients could not be improved. Retrospective analysis of 391 cases of adult bacterial meningitis between 1950 and 1985 shows no significant changes in etiology and only slight reduction in mortality. The course of the disease depends mostly on age, state of consciousness and CSF cell count. Cases of meningitis in HIV patients and cerebral tuberculosis have not been evaluated in this study.
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PMID:[Fatality of purulent meningitis in adults 1950 to 1985. Retrospective study of the case histories of 391 patients of the Cologne Neurologic University Clinic]. 208 9

Radioactive gallium citrate has been known to accumulate not only in neoplasms but also in inflammatory foci, and thus widely used to find out pyrogenic lesions in cases of unexplainable prolonged fever. However, with developments and improvements of other imaging modalities, its diagnostic significance may have changed. To probe that issue, recent 65 scans for the patients with fever of unknown origin were reviewed retrospectively. Of these, 56 had sufficient clinical assessment and laboratory examinations to evaluate causative illnesses. Gallium images of 33 patients were interpreted as positive. Local inflammatory lesions were detected in 23 cases, with lung tuberculosis, urinary tract infection, and inflammatory joint diseases as prevalent final diagnoses. Pyogenic abscesses, though popular in the literatures on fever of unknown origin, were found in only 2 cases in our present series. This seemed to be due to earlier detection of affected sites by other imaging technics. Osteomyelitis, other major cause of fever in the past, was not found this time, probably owing to wide use of antibiotics. Besides localized diseases, seven cases of generalized disorders were found. There were 3 patients with hematological malignancies, 3 with systemic autoimmune diseases, and 1 with severe infectious mononucleosis. There were three false positive cases; intestinal gallium radioactivity in 2 cases and physiological pulmonary hilar accumulation in 1 were erroneously read as abnormal. Of 23 cases with negative gallium scan, no definite cause of fever were found in 19; twelve patients had spontaneous reduction of fever, 2 did so with antibiotics, and 5 with corticosteroids. False negative cases were; two with urinary tract infection on antibiotics, one with bacterial meningitis, and one with polyarteritis nodosa. Our results reconfirmed the excellent sensitivity and accuracy of gallium scan in the diagnosis of fever of unknown origin. In addition to the detection of focal inflammations, it may sometimes contribute to an early diagnosis of unexpected systemic diseases. From the results obtained, it is advisable that, in patients with fever of unknown origin, this test should be done early in diagnostic schedule and before administration of drugs that may mask potential sites of abnormal accumulation.
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PMID:[Fever of unknown origin: re-evaluation of 67Ga scintigraphy in detecting causes of fever]. 223 16

A chemical marker of bacterial meningitis was sought by comparing derivatives of sterile cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) with cultures of organisms in spinal fluid and artificial media. The technique of gas chromatography-mass spectrometry with selected ion monitoring (GC-MS-SIM) was used, optimised for the analysis of fatty acids. Twenty candidate ions were screened, and an ion of mass: charge ratio (m/e) 268 was chosen for detection in clinical specimens. The origin of this marker is unknown, but it is probably the molecular ion of a C16:1 fatty acid. In 135 clinical specimens of CSF examined, the m/e 268 ion was found to be a useful marker for the common organisms that cause bacterial meningitis, giving a sensitivity of 88% and a specificity of 98%. The method was more rapid and more sensitive than conventional microscopy and culture, but CSF containing coagulase-negative staphylococci, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Cryptococcus neoformans and some other uncommon pathogens gave inconsistent results. Many organisms produced characteristic ion profiles with multiple-ion monitoring, and this method of chemical analysis holds promise for the rapid diagnosis of bacterial infections to genus or species level.
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PMID:Rapid diagnosis of bacterial meningitis by the detection of a fatty acid marker in CSF with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and selected ion monitoring. 229 39

The author correlated in a group of 1100 autopsies made in 1987-1989 the clinical and autoptic diagnosis of active tuberculosis of the lungs and organs, bacterial meningitis, acute and subacute endocarditis, septicaemia, acute cholangitis, diffuse suppurative peritonitis, renal infections, and pneumonias. Class I diagnostic errors, i.e. those where knowledge of the diagnosis before autopsy would have probably changed therapy and the prognosis, were encountered in all groups of correlated diseases, however, with a high frequency in tuberculosis of the lungs and organs, septicaemia, renal infections and pneumonias. It seems that the diagnostic vigilance to some common serious diseases caused by infections declines in the practice of general hospitals. This experience was recorded also in hospitals abroad. Causes of diagnostic errors are discussed.
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PMID:[Autopsy correlations in the clinical diagnosis of serious diseases caused by infections in the practice of a general hospital]. 234 May 68


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