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

Bacterial meningitis after pelvic trauma has never been described. We recently treated a patient who developed, during the course of his hospitalization, multiresistant enterococcal meningitis after severe pelvic injury, including a comminutive sacral fracture. Dural tear may have been the main factor leading to secondary infection of the cerebrospinal fluid. Treatment with intravenous continuous infusion of vancomycin plus rifampin, associated with closed subarachnoid drainage, resulted in a complete cure. Therapeutic cerebrospinal fluid levels of vancomycin were obtained only during the first 8 days of treatment. Use of glycopeptides in meningitis and the role of cerebrospinal fluid drainage are discussed. Physicians should be aware of the diagnosis and therapeutic features of this life-threatening complication.
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PMID:Nosocomial meningitis caused by multiresistant enterococcus as a life-threatening complication of pelvic injury: case report. 747 36

We report a case of an infected renal cystic mass associated with bacterial meningitis in a 70-year-old woman who had had poorly-controlled diabetes mellitus for approximately 30 years. She suffered from bacterial meningitis due to Klebsiella pneumoniae, which was successfully treated with antimicrobial chemotherapy for 1 month. Approximately 2 weeks later she developed left flank pain and a high fever. A CT scan and an ultrasonogram revealed a left renal cystic mass, which was considered to be an infected renal cyst. Turbid and thick fluid was obtained by percutaneous aspiration which contained numerous white blood cells. Culture of this fluid yielded K. pneumoniae. The bacterial meningitis was considered to be a secondary infection of the septicemia which resulted from the infected renal cystic mass.
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PMID:Infected renal cystic mass associated with bacterial meningitis: a case report. 884 88

Serial C-reactive protein (CRP) measurements appear to be helpful in following clinical course and response to treatment of serious bacterial infections in neonates, such as meningitis, septicaemia and osteomyelitis. In previous studies, serial determination of serum CRP could detect potential complications of meningitis, such as subdural effusion, purulent arthritis and osteomyelitis, and secondary skin infection. We report an 11-day-old full-term male neonate with persistent positive CRP after treatment of bacterial meningitis, and who developed hydrocephaly at follow-up. We concluded that positive CRP was secondary to aqueduct gliosis; therefore monitoring of serum CRP levels in infants with bacterial meningitis represented useful information, not only in persistent or secondary infection, but also for destructive complications of meningitis.
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PMID:C-reactive protein as an indicator of aqueductal gliosis and hydrocephaly in neonatal meningitis. 1858 Oct 11