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)

C-Reactive protein (CRP) has been measured in 90 consecutive CSF specimens using both latex agglutination and an immunoradiometric assay (IRMA). In the 60 CSF specimens otherwise normal by standard biochemical and microbiological criteria, the median CRP level was 32 micrograms/l (95% confidence limits, 0-108 micrograms/l) and in the remaining abnormal specimens the median level was 176 micrograms/l (95% confidence limits, 110-325 micrograms/l, p = 0.001). C-Reactive protein was detected by a commercial latex agglutination kit at a level of approximately 120 micrograms/l and all significant CNS bacterial infections were positive (7 bacterial meningitis, 2 infected shunts). In addition, viral encephalitis, extensive intracranial malignancy and subarachnoid haemorrhage gave positive agglutinations, but not in every case. A further nine specimens with a minor elevation of CRP level were detected by IRMA (median 76 micrograms/l), but this was of little practical significance. We have shown that normal CSF C-reactive protein levels are very low and we conclude that latex agglutination set at a sensitivity of 120 micrograms/l, although only semi-quantitative, is a rapid and useful method to assess CSF C-reactive protein in routine clinical practice and, when positive, is strong supporting evidence for bacterial infection.
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PMID:The clinical value of rapid C-reactive protein measurement in cerebro-spinal fluid. 399 76

The seriousness of bacterial meningitis in pediatrics mandates more rapid and accurate diagnostic tests. Of the available tests to detect bacterial antigens, latex particle agglutination appears to be the best because it is simple and highly sensitive. For differentiation between bacterial and aseptic meningitis, serum C-reactive protein levels in excess of 50 mg/liter and cerebrospinal fluid lactate levels higher than 2.2 mmol/ml indicate a bacterial etiology. Available data confirm that one of the newer "third generation" cephalosporins can be used effectively and safely as a single drug for therapy of meningitis caused by the usual spectrum of bacteria, if the achievable cerebrospinal fluid drug levels exceed the minimal inhibitory concentration of the infecting bacteria by at least 10-fold. Use of these agents will obviate the potential toxicity of current antibiotics and may result in considerable cost savings.
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PMID:Advances in diagnosis and treatment of childhood meningitis. 400 Oct 1

The value of cerebrospinal fluid C-reactive protein (CSF CRP) determination as a diagnostic aid in infective meningitis has been investigated in four groups of children. In a "no meningitis" group of 10 children, a median CSF CRP value of 0.08 micrograms/ml was obtained (range 0 to 0.31 micrograms/ml); in a viral meningitis group of 21 children a median value of 0.01 micrograms/ml (range 0 to 3.06 micrograms/ml); in a bacterial meningitis group of 27 children a median value of 9.6 micrograms/ml (range 0 to 31.5 micrograms/ml); and in a tuberculous meningitis group of 18 children a median value of 0.29 micrograms/ml (range 0 to 4.9 micrograms/ml). CSF CRP values in the bacterial meningitis group differed significantly from those of each of the other groups (P less than 0.01), but considerable overlap between the groups detracted from the diagnostic value of the test. In six patients with bacterial meningitis with ambiguous conventional CSF chemistry results, normal CSF CRP values were found. Simultaneous serum CRP was determined in nine patients with tuberculous meningitis and 11 with bacterial meningitis, and the CRP response in both the serum and CSF appears subdued in tuberculous meningitis in comparison with bacterial meningitis. CSF CRP and total protein values were determined intermittently during a 24-hour period in ventricular CSF from two children with tuberculous meningitis who underwent temporary direct ventricular drainage. A considerable and apparently parallel diurnal variation in both values was seen. CSF CRP values have limited application in the etiologic diagnosis of meningitis.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid C-reactive protein in infective meningitis in childhood. 404 98

Serum C-reactive protein (CRP) was measured nephelometrically or turbidimetrically for rapid differential diagnosis of sixteen bacterial and fifteen viral infections of the central nervous system in patients aged from 2 weeks to 49 years. On hospital admission CRP levels were far above the upper limit of normal (19 mg/l) in all patients with bacterial meningitis, regardless of the duration of illness, the age of the patient, the bacterium involved, fever, the erythrocyte sedimentation rate, or the cerebrospinal-fluid cell count. In contrast, a slight rise in CRP level was seen in only one case of viral meningitis. CRP was useful also in monitoring the clinical course of the illnesses and in the detection of subdural effusion in one patient with Haemophilus influenzae meningitis and of otitis media in another patient with coxsackie B meningitis. If no complications developed, CRP levels returned to normal within 7 days in the bacterial meningitis group. The rapid measurement of CRP levels is of importance and should be used more often in clinical practice.
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PMID:C-reactive protein for rapid monitoring of infections of the central nervous system. 612 44

The presence of C-reactive protein in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has been proposed as an early indicator of bacterial meningitis in children. A commercial latex agglutination test (CR-test, Hyland) was performed in CSF obtained at first lumbar puncture in 114 children (26 neonates and 88 children aged from 1 month to 15 years) presenting with meningitis-like episodes. The CSF was regarded as normal in 41 cases; 50 had non-bacterial meningitis, and bacterial infection was diagnosed in 14 and suspected in 9. The latex agglutination test was positive in the first CSF sample from 2 neonates with bacterial meningitis, but its specificity was low (= 0.58). In older infants and children the test was positive in 18/21 cases of bacterial meningitis (sensitivity = 0.86) and negative in the 18 cases with normal CSF, as well as in 47/49 cases of non-bacterial meningitis (specificity = 0.97). The presence of C-reactive protein in CSF obtained at first lumbar puncture therefore is unreliable to distinguish between bacterial and aseptic meningitis.
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PMID:[C-reactive protein of the cerebrospinal fluid in children. A new evaluation of its diagnostic value]. 623 60

White blood cell count (WBC), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) were determined upon diagnosis of 61 children with bacterial meningitis in order to compare the responses evoked by different bacteria. The age of the patients and the duration of their symptoms were similar in all groups. WBC and ESR corresponded significantly with the bacterial species. The mean WBC in Haemophilus influenzae (n = 44), meningococcal (n = 11) and pneumococcal (n = 6) infection were 14,605/microliters 19,391/microliters and 23,833/microliters, respectively (for H. influenzae and pneumococci p less than 0.001). The mean ESR varied from 58 mm/h (meningococci) to 100 mm/h (pneumococci) (p less than 0.025). CRP was the test least influenced by the nature of the bacteria. The characteristics of CRP suggest its superiority over WBC and ESR as a detector of bacteremic infections. WBC is unsuitable for screening of systemic H. influenzae disease.
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PMID:White blood cell count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate and serum C-reactive protein in meningitis: magnitude of the response related to bacterial species. 651 Oct 86

The level of C-reactive protein (CRP) was determined in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) by particle counting immunoassay. In non-neurological patients (N = 24), CRP was detectable only in 10 samples at concentrations ranging from 1.5 to 37 micrograms/l. The multiple sclerosis group did not differ from the controls. The highest CRP levels were found in viral and bacterial, including tuberculous, infections of the nervous system, with overlapping results for the various types of infections. However, in serum, the levels of CRP were much higher in pyogenic than in viral meningitis. We compared the CSF CRP/serum CRP ratio to the same ratio for albumin and found a significant correlation between the two ratios in viral, but not in bacterial, infections. These results suggest a local consumption of CRP during bacterial meningitis.
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PMID:C-reactive protein in serum and cerebrospinal fluid in various neurological disorders. Apparent local consumption during bacterial meningitis. 672 76

Twenty-eight bacteriologically proved episodes of purulent meningitis in 27 infants and children were monitored prospectively with sequential determinations of serum C-reactive protein. Except in one rapidly fatal case, all the patients showed decreasing CRP values for about 1 week. In five patients the CRP values than returned to a high level (P less than 0.001). Each of these patients developed an organic complication (subdural effusions in three, transient widening of the ventricles in one, purulent arthritis with osteomyelitis in one). Except for one infant with sensorineural hearing loss, which probably had developed early in the course of meningitis, no permanent sequelae were found in the patients with uncomplicated courses. One infant later had a relapse of Escherichia coli meningitis, reflected in a sharp increase of CRP. We conclude that sequential CRP measurements may be performed routinely to detect potential complications at an early stage of bacterial meningitis.
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PMID:C-reactive protein as a detector of organic complications during recovery from childhood purulent meningitis. 672 18

C-reactive protein (CRP) was evaluated in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid in 119 patients to determine if either or both measurements were of clinical value in the diagnosis of bacterial meningitis. CSF C-reactive protein is too insensitive (sensitivity = 66%) to be useful, while serum CRP is too nonspecific for routine application. Serum CRP may have a role if used selectively in those patients with a low-grade CSF pleocytosis and a negative Gram's stain.
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PMID:Is C-reactive protein useful in the management of children with suspected bacterial meningitis? 673 57

The lactate, lysozyme, C-reactive protein and serum amyloid-A protein concentrations in cerebrospinal fluid were measured in 11 patients with bacterial meningitis, 27 patients with aseptic meningitis and in 31 control patients. The mean concentration of each parameter was significantly higher (p less than or equal to 0.0001) in patients with bacterial meningitis than in those with aseptic meningitis or those without meningitis. The reliability of these tests in the differential diagnosis of bacterial and aseptic meningitis was compared with leucocyte counts in cerebrospinal fluid. Gram staining for bacteria, and protein and glucose levels. The cerebrospinal fluid lactate level proved to be more sensitive than lysozyme. C-reactive protein or serum amyloid-A protein and had a high degree of specificity.
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PMID:The differential diagnosis of bacterial and aseptic meningitis using cerebrospinal fluid laboratory tests. 688 72


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