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

Four patients with bacterial meningitis are reported. On initial examination 1 patient had a slightly abnormal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and in the other 3 patients the CSF was completely normal. An obviously purulent CSF was obtained when lumbar puncture was repeated 14-48 hours later. All 4 patients presented initially with pyrexia, and either neck stiffness or convulsions. In 3 of the 4 patients a cause for pyrexia was found on initial examination but lumbar punctures were done for neck stiffness or convulsions to exclude meningitis. The problems and the need to repeat a lumbar puncture, as well as the importance of blood cultures in a patient with suspected meningitis, are discussed. The fact that a normal specimen of CSF does not exclude meningitis is stressed.
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PMID:The need to repeat lumbar puncture. 40 17

Spinal epidural abscesses (SEA) are uncommon in children. This paper reported a two-year-old boy who was noted to have neck stiffness, with local tenderness posteriorly. Bacterial meningitis was suspected initially in terms of the finding of the cerebral spinal fluid; antibiotics were prescribed. Three days later another spinal tap was performed because of persistent high fever and irritability. A pus-like material drained out as the needle punctured into the spinal region. A magnetic resonance image (MRI) scan of the spine revealed a SEA, with extensive involvement from the second cervical spine to the lumbosacral spine region. Culture of the pus, as well as the blood and CSF, were positive for Staphylococcus aureus. Because of extensive involvement of the spinal epidural space, the patient was again given antibiotics: Prostaphllin and Amikin intravenously for six weeks instead of laminectomy. Then the oral antibiotic (Keflex) was given to the patient for another three months after the boy was discharged from the hospital. A review of the literature shows the incidence of SEA to be increasing and the bacterial spectra to be broadening because of increasing use of immunosuppressing drugs or antibiotics, and the increase in numbers of immunecompromised patient. The clinical symptoms and signs of the SEA were non-specific, but SEA can be early diagnosed by computurized tomography (CT) scan or MRI scan with caution. The literature suggests that, if the patient's condition fits the criteria for non-surgical treatment, antibiotic therapy is the first choice for preventing the complication of spinal deformity, especially in children.
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PMID:[Non-surgical treatment of spinal epidural abscesses: report of one case]. 177 63

Common clinical practice relies on the absence of neck stiffness or other meningeal signs to rule out meningitis in the alert, healthy adult. The literature does not address this specifically but implies that meningeal signs are reliable and usually present in awake patients, except infants, the elderly, and the immunosuppressed. In the following three cases two adults and a 4-year-old child, none of them immunosuppressed, presented with bacterial meningitis with no meningeal signs. In the first case, mental status was completely normal; in the second, there was only minor lethargy attributed to pain medication. In the third, lethargy was attributed to head trauma. In all three the diagnosis of meningitis was delayed up to 19 hours; lumbar puncture was performed while meningeal signs were still absent and cerebrospinal fluid analysis was grossly abnormal. All three patients had Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis, and all three suffered massive brain damage within 24 hours of presentation and eventually died. Although the true incidence of absent meningeal signs in meningitis is unknown, the condition is rare. Clinicians cannot rely on the absence of neck stiffness to rule out meningitis, even in healthy and awake adults, and lumbar puncture should be performed whenever there is serious consideration of that diagnosis.
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PMID:Fulminant bacterial meningitis without meningeal signs. 291 Jan 68

The differentiation of bacterial from aseptic meningitis in postoperative neurosurgical patients has traditionally been based on the clinical setting, a recent history of steroid administration, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) studies, including the total and differential leukocyte counts, Gram stain, glucose, and total protein. Recent reports questioning both the validity of a relative CSF lymphocytosis in excluding bacterial meningitis and the usefulness of standard CSF testing prompted the authors to reevaluate these standard criteria. The type of operation, the presence of a foreign body, use of steroids, postoperative day on which symptoms developed, altered mental status, neck stiffness, headache, and nausea were not helpful in the differential diagnosis. High fever, new neurological deficits, an active CSF leak, and elevated leukocyte counts in the CSF and peripheral blood favored a bacterial etiology. The CSF glucose level and the differential leukocyte count were less helpful. No criterion or combination of criteria was sensitive and specific enough to reliably differentiate aseptic from bacterial meningitis in the majority of patients. The possibility of improving diagnostic accuracy with newer tests, such as CSF lactate, ferritin, total amino acids, C-reactive protein, and amyloid-A, should be assessed.
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PMID:Differentiation of aseptic and bacterial meningitis in postoperative neurosurgical patients. 318 29

During the period January 1980 to December 1990 (11 years) a retrospective study of patients with bacterial meningitis who were admitted to Bangkok Children's Hospital was carried out. There were 618 patients with 77 cases (12.5%) occurring below the age of one month (neonatal meningitis), and 541 cases (87.5%) between one month to 15 years (childhood meningitis). Pseudomonas aeruginosa was the most common pathogenic organism (16.9%) in neonatal meningitis; other causative agents in this age group included Klebsiella pneumoniae (13.0%), group B Streptococcus (11.7%), Escherichia coli and Enterobacter sp (10.4% each). In childhood meningitis, Haemophilus influenzae was the most common causative organism (42.3%), and followed by Streptococcus pneumoniae (22.2%) and Salmonella sp (12.4%). Excluding a 13 year-old leukemic patient, Salmonella meningitis occurred exclusively in infants, 87% of them were under six months, and 13% of them developed relapsing meningitis. Presenting symptoms and signs on admission of neonatal meningitis such as fever (81.8%), convulsions (45.4%), neck stiffness (22.5%), bulging fontanelle (33.3%) and Brudzinski sign (11.5%) were significantly less frequent than in the patients beyond the neonatal period (p < 0.05). The overall fatalities during 1980-1990 were 45.4% and 17.3% for neonatal meningitis and childhood meningitis, respectively. The fatalities of the two age groups declined significantly during 1987-1990 to 26.3% and 11.4% respectively.
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PMID:Bacterial meningitis in children: etiology and clinical features, an 11-year review of 618 cases. 782 99

The relationship between length of prediagnostic history and course and sequelae of childhood bacterial meningitis was prospectively examined by collecting data from 286 children with bacteriologically confirmed bacterial meningitis. The cases were divided into three groups: short (< or = 24 hours, N = 141); intermediate (> 24 to 48 hours, N = 75); and long (> 48 hours, N = 70) history. The level of consciousness and serum C-reactive protein normalized sooner during hospitalization in patients with a longer history. They also showed neck stiffness more often and longer and had thrombocytosis earlier and more prominently than patients with a shorter history. The differences were not influenced by etiology, sex or age. The occurrence of neurologic abnormalities in the hospital or during the first 6 months after discharge was not affected by duration of illness before hospitalization. We conclude that our results support the view that bacterial meningitis presents in two forms. At presentation the more acute form often has a history of less than 24 hours and poses a great danger to the patient. In contrast the other form develops insidiously and is more difficult to detect but does not have a worse prognosis than the acute form.
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PMID:Length of prediagnostic history related to the course and sequelae of childhood bacterial meningitis. 845 Oct 93

A 75-year-old female with diabetes mellitus, who was born and lived in West north Kyusyu, was admitted to our hospital, because of unconsciousness and loss of appetite. The physical examination showed neck stiffness and a high fever. The laboratory data showed accentuation of inflammatory reaction and azotemia and positive HTLV-1 antibody. The spinal fluid showed increase of cell count and amount of protein. A stool and sputum smear revealed rhabditis form larvae of the nematode. Antibiotics and ivermectin were administered for the bacterial meningitis and hyperinfection of the strongyloides, respectively. Consequently, meningitis and strongyloidiasis improved. It was considered that the patient was infected with strongyloides from her husband who serve in the army during World-War II, and hyperinfection of strongyloides resulted from the immunosuppressive state of diabetes mellitus. Ivermectin, and anti-strongyloides agent, was effective, and no side effects were seen. However, the therapeutic resistance in this case was associated with the positive HTLV-1 antibody.
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PMID:[A case of bacterial meningitis induced by strongyloidiasis]. 928 47

A retrospective study was conducted to examine the laboratory, clinical features and outcome of 206 adult acute bacterial meningitis patients (218 episodes) during the years 1985-1996. Pneumonia (8.7 per cent), head trauma (7.8 per cent) and chronic otitis media (6.0 per cent) were identified as the main predisposing factors for acute bacterial meningitis. Aetiology was described only in 61 episodes (28.0 per cent). Streptococcus pneumonia was the most commonly identified pathogen overall, causing 33 of the 218 episodes (15.2 per cent). Antibiotic treatment before admission was given to 48.4 per cent of patients. On admission, the following symptoms of meningitis were predominant: 83 per cent had neck stiffness, 81 per cent had a headache and 73 per cent had fever. Case fatality rate was 27.1 per cent (59 patients). The important factors in mortality were as follows: old age, a long duration of symptoms before admission, a lack of neck stiffness, obtunded mental state on admission, low glucose levels in first CSF, low CSF/blood glucose ratio, and abnormality in computerised tomography scanning.
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PMID:Acute bacterial meningitis in adults: analysis of 218 episodes. 939 72

Children aged 1-59 months admitted to Goroka Base Hospital with signs suggestive of meningitis were recruited to determine what proportion of such children have clinical or bacterial meningitis and to investigate the bacterial aetiology. A laboratory classification of definite, probable, possible, indeterminate and no meningitis was established. Thirty per cent of 697 children had a final clinical diagnosis of meningitis, 12% had culture-proven bacterial meningitis (case fatality rate 34%) and 10% had probable or possible meningitis. Inability to feed, vomiting, drowsiness, "staring eyes" and haemoglobin < 9 g/dl in addition to the classical signs of meningitis were associated with increased mortality. Isolates from cerebrospinal fluid were 62 pneumococci, 22 Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) and one Neisseria meningitidis. Including blood culture-proven and antigen-proven Hib disease, Hib and pneumococci accounted for 44% and 46% of bacterial meningitis, respectively, and 23% of pneumococci were intermediately resistant to penicillin. Inability to feed, bulging fontanelle, convulsions in young children, neck stiffness, fever and "staring eyes" were all independently associated with bacterial meningitis. Conjugate Hib vaccine must be given to infants as early as possible. Conjugate pneumococcal vaccines, maternal immunization with 23-valent vaccine and pneumococcal protein vaccines are under investigation for prevention of pneumococcal disease.
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PMID:Aetiology and clinical signs of bacterial meningitis in children admitted to Goroka Base Hospital, Papua New Guinea, 1989-1992. 1060 17

Central nervous system infections in adolescents range from the diffuse cerebritis of encephalitis to the regional inflammation of meningitis, and very focal disease of brain abscess. Clinical presentations reflect this wide spectrum, with encephalitis primarily characterized by altered mental status, meningitis by fever, headache, and neck stiffness, and brain abscess manifesting localizing findings. Encephalitis and viral meningitis are frequently caused by the seasonal enteroviruses and arboviruses, while most adolescent bacterial meningitis is due to Neisseria meningitidis and Streptococcus pneumoniae. The microbiology of brain abscess reflects underlying host risk factors. Gram-positive cocci are seen in patients with congenital heart disease, while respiratory flora including anaerobes are associated with sinus or otic disease. Lumbar puncture to characterize and culture the CSF remains the optimal test for the diagnosis and management of encephalitis and meningitis, while CT-guided needle biopsy may be both diagnostic and therapeutic for brain abscesses. New diagnostic tests include the use of PCR. A variety of safe and effective treatment regimens exists for most bacterial infections as well as for some herpesvirus infections. New vaccines are under study to further control bacterial meningitis.
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PMID:Serious infections of the central nervous system: encephalitis, meningitis, and brain abscess. 1091 31


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