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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (
bacterial meningitis
)
4,038
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Because of our experience with four cases of purulent pericarditis complicating
bacterial meningitis
during a 13-month period, we performed a prospective study to determine the frequency of this complication. Echocardiograms were done on 100 patients with
bacterial meningitis
. Small or moderate pericardial effusions were detected in 19 patients, but none had symptoms or signs related to the effusion. Pericardiocentesis was done in one infant; all the other effusions resolved spontaneously. Patients with effusion were significantly younger than those without this complication, but no other significant risk factors were identified. A literature survey indicated that symptomatic pericarditis occurs in fewer than 1% of patients with meningitis. Conversely, in series of cases of purulent pericarditis, associated meningitis was reported in 12% of patients. We concluded that pericardial infection is common in patients with meningitis but that it is usually of no clinical significance and resolves with antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:The frequency of pericardial effusions in bacterial meningitis. 44 Aug 99
Taurine was measured in cerebrospinal fluid by reacting it with fluorescamine to form a fluorescent derivative, followed by separation on a reversed-phase column and fluorometric detection and evaluation. The assay is rapid (17 min) and sensitive to as little as 1 mumol/L. The mean value for 27 cerebrospinal fluid samples collected from patients free from meningitis and aneurysm was 5.7 +/- 1.8 mumol/L. Twenty-two patients with
bacterial meningitis
showed a 0- to 20-fold increase in cerebrospinal fluid taurine, with a return to normal values after antibiotic treatment.
...
PMID:Liquid-chromatographic measurement of taurine in cerebrospinal fluid of normal individuals and patients with meningitis. 45 70
Anaerobic meningitis occurred in four patients in whom anaerobic bacteria had not been suspected as a possible cause. The predisposing conditions were typical of those seen in patients previously reported to have this infection and included chronic otitis media with mastoiditis, chronic sinusitis, recent craniotomy and abdominal trauma. Two of the patients had undergone immunosuppression (immunosuppressed patients); a compromised immune system may facilitate the development of anaerobic meningitis in patients with the appropritate underlying conditions. Head and neck neoplasms, head trauma, suppurative pharyngitis and laminectomy wounds are additional situations in which anaerobic meningitis occurs. Anaerobic
bacterial meningitis
probably occurs more often than is recognized. The cerebrospinal fluid should be transported and cultured anaerobically when meningitis develops in a patient with a predisposing condition.
...
PMID:Anaerobic bacterial meningitis. 46 26
Eleven children with
bacterial meningitis
were treated intravenously with amoxicillin sodium to evaluate the efficacy of the parenteral form of amoxicillin for this serious infection and to measure the penetration of the drug into cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The infecting organisms were Haemophilus influenzae in nine cases and Streptococcus pneumoniae in two. Nine patients had optimal responses to amoxicillin sodium, 200 mg/kg per day for 14 days. Bacteria were also eradicated from CSF of the other two, but one experienced fever and culture-negative CSF pleocytosis after cessation of amoxicillin, and the other developed H. influenzae empyema 2 weeks after termination of therapy. By comparison, 7 of 10 children with meningitis responded optimally to ampicillin (nonrandomized design) during the period of study. The mean peak CSF concentration of amoxicillin was 3.14 mug/ml (ca. 7% of the concomitant mean peak serum level) early during therapy. However, meningeal penetration of the drug declined to a mean peak of 0.63 mug/ml on the final day of therapy. Mild transient neutropenia, noted in five patients, was the most common side effect of amoxicillin sodium therapy; five patients treated with ampicillin also experienced reversible neutropenia. Thus, intravenous amoxicillin sodium provided therapy for
bacterial meningitis
comparable to that of ampicillin in this limited case-control study.
...
PMID:Treatment of bacterial meningitis with intravenous amoxicillin. 48 28
A five day old neonate was diagnosed as having
bacterial meningitis
and commenced on Ampicillin and Flucloxacillin. The organism was then found to be Citrobacter koseri and the antibiotics changed to Chloramphenicol systemically for two weeks. The child made an uneventful recovery. At four weeks of age her head circumference had increased unacceptably and a computerised axial tomography scan revealed a large frontal lobe abscess. Aspiration revealed a large pus filled cavity and Citrobacter koseri grown from the pus. The abscess was treated with repeated aspirations, often of 30-40 mls., and installation of Chloramphenicol combined with systemic Chloramphenicol for three weeks. At six months of age her head circumference was within normal limits and the was developmentally normal with no detectable neurological sequelae.
...
PMID:Neonatal meningitis due to Citrobacter koseri. 50 12
During 1977 the state of Washington maintained a surveillance system for reporting cases of
bacterial meningitis
. Hemophilus influenzae meningitis was the most common etiologic agent causing
bacterial meningitis
. A high incidence rate for H. influenzae meningitis was found among American Indians less than five years ago. A focus of ampicillin-resistant H. influenzae meningitis was found in Pierce County among military dependents or persons who had family members or relatives working or attending school with Fort Lewis Army Base personnel. Although relationships between the individual cases were not detected, the surveillance system continues to seek some association.
...
PMID:Bacterial meningitis in Washington state. 50 27
Forty-three infants and children with
bacterial meningitis
were treated intravenously with 200 mg of amoxicillin sodium per kg per day for 10 days. (Patients were initially treated with ampicillin and chloramphenicol until the bacterial etiology was defined.) Patients were randomly treated with amoxicillin only or with amoxicillin and four doses of probenecid (10 mg/kg per dose) orally every 6 h for 24 h before the lumbar puncture at day 10. Serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were obtained on days 1, 5, and 10 of therapy for antibiotic assay. The mean peak serum concentration of amoxicillin of 49.2 micrograms/ml was increased to 61.4 micrograms/ml in patients who received probenecid. The half-life in serum (1.5 h) and area under the curve with probenecid (112.5 micrograms/ml-h) were increased compared with those of amoxicillin alone (1.3 h and 82.2 micrograms/ml-h). The mean peak CSF concentrations on days 1 and 5 were similar, but day 1 concentrations remained between 2.0 micrograms/ml and 5.0 micrograms/ml throughout the 4 h after a dose, whereas the day 5 values decreased at the same decay rate as that in serum. All CSF concentrations were lower on day 10, but patients receiving probenecid had peak values occurring at 1 hr rather than at 0.5 h, and levels were significantly greater at 1 and 2 h after a dose. There were no deaths and patients responded well to treatment.
...
PMID:Clinicopharmacological evaluation of amoxicillin and probenecid against bacterial meningitis. 50 89
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from 22 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and 20 samples from normal controls were studied for lactic acid levels. Ten samples were obtained from SLE patients with active central nervous system (CNS) involvement and 12 from SLE patients with inactive CNS disease. The mean CSF lactic acid level in patients with SLE was 17.24 +/- 1.25 mg/dl (range 31-10.2 mg/dl) which was not statistically different to the normal control mean of 14.75 +/- 0.9 mg/dl (range 9-28 mg/dl). Thus, lactic acid levels in active or inactive CNS disease of SLE appear to be normal. Due to the fact that lactic acid levels are elevated in the CSF of patients with
bacterial meningitis
, lactic acid levels can be of potential value in the differentiation between
bacterial meningitis
and CNS involvement of SLE.
...
PMID:Lactic acid levels in cerebrospinal fluid from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. 52 53
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) immunoglobulins were measured in 62 normal children, in 9 children with purulent meningitis, and in 10 children with presumptive viral meningitis. The mean values in normal children were IgA 0, IgM 0, and IgG 0.84 +/- 1.4 mg/100 ml (+/- SD). The mean levels of all CSF immunoglobulins were raised in acute
bacterial meningitis
and were significantly greater than the levels found in viral meningitis. CSF IgM was 0.16 +/- 0.5 mg/100 ml in viral meningitis compared with 2.64 +/- 2.06 mg/100 ml in
bacterial meningitis
(P less than 0.01). However, these values overlapped to a considerable extent and, generally, measurement of CSF immunoglobulins did not enhance diagnostic accuracy in this group of children.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid immunoglobulins in children. 53 1
A total of 22 newborn infants (14 boys, 8 girls) have been admitted and treated for
bacterial meningitis
in the University Pediatric Service of Geneva over a period of 11 years (May 1967 to May 1978). The three most common infectious agents were: Group B beta-hemolytic Streptococcus (6/22 cases), Escherichia coli (6/22 cases), and Listeria monocytogenes (4/22 cases). Thirteen of the 22 infants died (a 59% mortality, in keeping with that observed in other centers). Follow-up of the nine survivors showed a relatively favorable course from a developmental and neurological point of view. Only two of the infants have significant sequelae. Factors predisposing toward the occurrence of neonatal meningitis are a small birth weight, premature rupture of the membranes, and perinatal maternal infection. Prevention of neonatal meningitis is therefore very much dependent upon good perinatal care of the mother. Treatment of neonatal meningitis is impaired by the poor diffusion of antibiotics through the blood-brain barrier. Intrathecal antibiotics were used in 4 cases in this series, and three of these 4 patients died: intrathecal antibiotherapy is obviously not a good solution. Molecules with a better diffusion such as chloramphenicol should be considered with renewed interest.
...
PMID:[Bacterial meningitis in newborn infants. A retrospective study from a pediatric clinic 1967-1978]. 54 Dec 19
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