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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (
bacterial meningitis
)
4,038
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A retrospective chart review of 47 pateints with
bacterial meningitis
was conducted with respect to current guidelines used to define an adequate duration of antimicrobial therapy. Fifty percent (19/38) of patients had an inadequate response to therapy as defined by repeated lumbar puncture (LP) findings (ie, a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) blood cell count greater than 50/cu mm and/or a CSF
glucose
value less than 45 mg/100 ml) at the end of therapy. No cases of relapse were seen. Persistent CSF abnormalities were not associated with the presence of complicating disease but were associated with prolongation of antimicrobial therapy beyond 13 days. Patients having persistent CSF abnormalities at the time antibiotics were stopped had a higher CSF blood cell count and a lower
glucose
value on initial lumbar puncture than those not having persistent abnormalities (P less than .001). These results emphasize the limitations of the role of repeated LP in defining an adequate duration of antimicrobial therapy.
...
PMID:Bacterial meningitis. Limitations of repeated lumbar puncture. 83 21
A 25-year-old man was previously healthy until he contracted acute Propionibacterium acnes meningitis. Comparison with previous reports of de novo diphtheroid meningitis suggests that this entity can appear with features that are not characteristic of acute
bacterial meningitis
, including (1) stroke-like syndromes, (2) an afebrile course, and (3) a cerebrospinal fluid with a mononuclear pleocytosis and normal
glucose
level. The appropriate choice and dosage of antimicrobial agent must be guided by more than in vitro sensitivity data to prevent relapse and possible chronic meningitis. Although diphtheroids are as a rule exquisitely sensitive to penicillin, predictably high tissue levels of drug in diphtheroid meningitis are best achieved with chloramphenicol treatment. In the appropriate settling, the isolation of diphtheroids from cerebrospinal fluid should not be discounted as a "contaminant."
...
PMID:Propionibacterium acnes meningitis in a previously normal adult. 87 34
Hypoglycorrhachia (abnormally low cerebro spinal fluid
glucose
content) eludes exact numerical definition, largely because of the dynamic equilibrium between blood and CSF
glucose
. A group of 181 pediatric patients with a CSF
glucose
less than 50 mg/100 ml or a CSF/blood
glucose
ratio less than 0.50 were studied. Hypoglycorrhachia was present in patients with
bacterial meningitis
, aseptic meningitis, meningeal carcinomatosis, subarachnoid hemmorrhage, and hypoglycemia. Markedly diminished CSF
glucose
values were seen primarily in patients with
bacterial meningitis
. Higher CSF/blood
glucose
ratios predominated in those with hypoglycemia and neonates with low-normal blood sugars. Following
bacterial meningitis
and hypoglycemia, aseptic meningitis (including five children with documented enterovirus meningitis and one with documented mumps meningitis) was the third most common cause of hypoglycorrhachia in children. When readily available, positive CSF viral cultures may allow early cessation of antibiotic therapy in two types of patients with meningitis and hypoglycorrhachia: (1) those receiving previous recent antibiotic therapy, and (2) those with CSF findings more typical of a
bacterial meningitis
.
...
PMID:Hypoglycorrhachia in pediatric patients. 93 86
High levels of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) activity were found in 23 cases of
bacterial meningitis
, but significantly lower levels of CSF LDH activity were observed in 11 patients with viral meningitis and in 13 patients with no central nervous system infection. No correlation was found between levels of CSF LDH activity and specific agents or the amounts of CSF white blood cell, protein, and
glucose
. The number of meningitis cases of unknown cause that could be classified as probably bacterial or viral was increased by determination of the level of CSF LDH activity. The level of CSH LDH activity is useful in differentiating bacterial from viral meningitis and, along with determination of the CSF blood cell counts and protein and
glucose
levels, aids in classification of meningitis before culture results are available.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid lactic acid dehydrogenase activity. Levels in untreated and partially antibiotic-treated meningitis. 116 86
Results of CSF examinations from 117 high-risk neonates were reviewed. The mean CSF cell count was 8.4 cells/mm3 and the range was 0 to 32 cells/mm.3 Approximately 60% of the CSF WBC were polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Average CSF protein concentrations were 90 mg/dl (range, 20-170 mg/dl) in term and 115 mg/dl (range, 65-150 mg/dl) in preterm infants. The average CSF
glucose
was 81% of the blood
glucose
value in term and 74% in preterm infants. Comparison of these CSF findings with those from 119 infants with
bacterial meningitis
revealed that there was considerable overlapping of values, but only one of the 119 infants with meningitis had a completely normal initial CSF examination. The decision to initiate antimicrobial therapy in neonates with suspected meningitis must be based on total evaluation of the patient.
...
PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid evaluation in neonates: comparison of high-risk infants with and without meningitis. 124 61
Review of 102 admissions of children (one month to seven years of age) with
bacterial meningitis
is presented. 46 of the patients (45%) had been treated previously with one or more antibiotics. Previous treatment made culture of CSF negative in a statistically significant (p less than 0.001) number of cases, mainly in meningococcal meningitis. There were no significant differences in the levels of CSF
glucose
, proteins and WBC's between both groups. A decrease of the percentage PMN/lymphocytes was found in the CSF of the partially treated group. In 7 out of 102 no more than two CSF pathological findings were present. In 5 or 7 CSF cultures were positive. In the other two there were pathological changes in CSF even with correct dosage of previous antibiotics. In 4 patients with positive cultures and little changes in CSF on admission, LP after 48 hours of correct treatment showed an increase in the alterations of CSF. This could mean that previous low dosage antibiotic treatment should not modify CSF findings enough not to make correct diagnosis.
...
PMID:[CSF. changes in partially treated bacterial meningitis (author's transl)]. 126
The diagnosis of
bacterial meningitis
can be difficult nowadays when antibiotics are freely used in infants and children with fever due to infection, so that a positive smear or culture may be difficult to achieve. In areas where sophisticated methods of diagnosis may be hard to come by, the simple procedure of simultaneously estimating the blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
glucose
levels may be helpful in distinguishing
bacterial meningitis
from viral meningitis. 74 proven cases of
bacterial meningitis
and aseptic meningitis were investigated prior to treatment. There were 36 cases of
bacterial meningitis
and 38 cases of aseptic meningitis. The CSF
glucose
/plasma
glucose
ratio was calculated for each patient. The cases were divided into two groups; Group A with CSF
glucose
/plasma
glucose
ratio of (0.38-2.0) and Group B with CSF
glucose
/plasma
glucose
ratio of (0.1-0.35). In Group A, two out of 59 cases died while in Group B, nine out of 15 died (p < 0.01). 44 out of 59 in Group A recovered fully while only two out of 15 in Group B were cured (p < 0.01). It was also found that 54.2% in Group A were admitted in deep coma compared with 86.7% in Group B (p < 0.05) and 25.4% in Group A were admitted with seizures while 66.7% in Group B had convulsion (p < 0.01). Hence, a low CSF
glucose
/plasma
glucose
ratio was associated with a poor outcome. The mechanisms responsible for these findings are discussed especially with reference to the blood-brain barrier (BBB).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The use of blood glucose/cerebrospinal fluid glucose ratio in the diagnosis of central nervous system infection in infants and children. 130 60
Metabolic abnormalities during
bacterial meningitis
include hypoglycorrhachia and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactate accumulation. The mechanisms by which these alterations occur within the central nervous system (CNS) are still incompletely delineated. To determine the evolution of these changes and establish the locus of abnormal metabolism during meningitis,
glucose
and lactate concentrations in brain interstitial fluid, CSF, and serum were measured simultaneously and sequentially during experimental pneumococcal meningitis in rabbits. Interstitial fluid samples were obtained from the frontal cortex and hippocampus by using in situ brain microdialysis, and serum and CSF were directly sampled. There was an increase of CSF lactate concentration, accompanied by increased local production of lactate in the brain, and a decrease of CSF-to-serum
glucose
ratio that was paralleled by a decrease in cortical
glucose
concentration. Brain microdialysate lactate concentration was not affected by either systemic lactic acidosis or artificially elevated CSF lactate concentration. These data support the hypothesis that the brain is a locus for anaerobic glycolysis during meningitis, resulting in increased lactate production and perhaps contributing to decreased tissue
glucose
concentration.
...
PMID:Lactate and glucose concentrations in brain interstitial fluid, cerebrospinal fluid, and serum during experimental pneumococcal meningitis. 150 Jul 38
Selected clinical and laboratory parameters were studied respectively in patients with meningitis caused by enterococci and viridans streptococci in an academic children's hospital. During a nine-year period (1981-1989), enterococci or viridans streptococci were isolated from the cerobrospinal fluid (CSF) of 48 patients. In nine of these 48 patients, enterococci or viridans streptococci were the causative agents of meningitis. These nine children constituted 2.0% of 450 patients with
bacterial meningitis
in this period. All nine children suffered from underlying diseases; neurosurgical procedures were performed in six of these patients, of whom four had ventricular drains. A head trauma preceded the development of meningitis in another patient. Drainage of the lacrimal duct was associated with the development of meningitis in another patients. One child concurrently suffered from severe gastroenteritis. CSF leukocyte count and CSF protein levels were moderately elevated, whereas CSF
glucose
levels were either slightly decreased or within the normal range. Meningitis due to enterococci or viridans streptococci is seen predominantly in children under the age of one year. Predisposing factors, including neurosurgical procedures, head trauma and severe gastroenteritis, are usually present in these patients. The prognosis for recovery is generally good.
...
PMID:Childhood meningitis caused by enterococci and viridans streptococci. 164 84
To simulate a traumatic lumbar puncture, blood was added to 33 normal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens. A hypothesis was tested if the CSF
glucose
and CSF lactate were unchanged after contamination with blood. Lactate and
glucose
here measured in both normal and blood-stained CSF. The estimated contamination of the normal CSF with red cells ranged from 84000 to 676500 cells per cubic millimeter. CSF lactate was unchanged by the addition of blood (P = 0.8), whereas CSF
glucose
was significantly higher in the blood-stained CSF (P = 0.0005). Therefore, the determination of lactate levels in the CSF heavily contaminated with blood could be useful in differentiating viral from
bacterial meningitis
.
...
PMID:Lactate and glucose in cerebrospinal fluid heavily contaminated with blood. 172 18
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