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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
16 adult patients with Listeria monocytogenes meningitis were reviewed to see whether clinical features or initial laboratory findings could discriminate between these patients and patients with purulent meningitis of other causes. Six patients suffered from known predisposing diseases and 4 were alcoholics. The initial clinical picture was indistinguishable from meningitis of other causes. Microscopy of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was negative in all cases but 2 where gram-positive rods were seen. CSF cytology and biochemistry could not discriminate from other causes of purulent meningitis although a low leucocyte content and a low percentage of neutrophils were often present. All L. monocytogenes strains isolated were sensitive to
ampicillin
and aminoglycosides whereas susceptibility to other antibiotics was low or varying. In adult patients suffering from purulent meningitis initial therapy should include
ampicillin
until an etiological diagnosis is established. The same is true in some cases of febrile
encephalopathy
with low content of neutrophils in CSF, especially when the glucose content is low.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes meningitis in adults. Sixteen consecutive cases 1973-1982. 310 48
In a five-year retrospective study, there were 57 episodes of bacteremia among 1623 admissions (3.5%) of patients suffering from cirrhosis. Gram-positive bacteria were found in 70% of the episodes, gram-negative bacteria in 30%. All of the gram-positive bacteria found were fully sensitive to methicillin and to gentamicin. The gram-negative bacteria found were all sensitive to gentamicin, but only 50% were sensitive to
ampicillin
. The distribution between gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria was the same, irrespective of whether the patients acquired the infection inside or outside the hospital. More than 50% of the patients suffered from one or more of the following complications of cirrhosis: ascites,
encephalopathy
and haematemesis. Twenty-one patients died within seven days after the bacteremia was diagnosed. Bacteremia is a serious complication of advanced cirrhosis, and it is recommended that adequate antibiotic treatment is started when septicemia is suspected.
...
PMID:Bacteremia in patients suffering from cirrhosis. 371 May 95
To add information about sporadic Legionnaires' disease, 87 cases of L. pneumophila pneumonia were reviewed. Twenty cases were nosocomial infections and 67 cases were community-acquired. Most cases (64%) occurred between July and October. The mean age of patients was 51.4 years and males outnumbered females 2.5:1.0. Thirty-one percent of patients were receiving corticosteroid, immunosuppressive, or antineoplastic chemotherapy when illness began. Immunosuppression at onset of illness was more common in nosocomial infections (90%) than in community-acquired infections (14%). Seventy percent of patients had underlying diseases. Malignancies, renal failure, and transplantation were the most common conditions underlying nosocomial infections. Chronic lung disease and malignancies were the most common diseases underlying community-acquired infections. The case-fatality rate in nosocomial infection (70%) was greater than that in community-acquired disease (22%). Clinical, laboratory, and radiologic features of the cases were examined. Illness ranged from mild to severe. Extrapulmonary findings of
encephalopathy
and renal failure were more common in fatal than in non-fatal cases. Indirect immunofluorescent and microagglutination antibody responses plateaued by the fourth week of illness. Twenty-nine patients died. The case-fatality rate of patients receiving erythromycin (6%) was less than that of patients receiving penicillin (36%),
ampicillin
(28%), cephalosporin (32%), or aminoglycosides (41%). Despite erythromycin therapy, the case fatality rate for nosocomial L. pneumophilia pneumonia was unacceptably high (25%).
...
PMID:Sporadic Legionnaires' disease: clinical observations on 87 nosocomial and community-acquired cases. 646 87
All the cases of enteric fever admitted between 1988-1992 were studied. There was a gradual rise in the number of admitted cases. Central nervous system (CNS) complications like
encephalopathy
(14.9%), meningitis (8.8%), seizures (8.5%) and cerebellitis (3.4%) were noted more during 1991 and 1992. Other complications like myocarditis (4.6%), hepatitis (9.5%) and gastrointestinal bleeding were noted in increasing numbers during 1991-1992. Multidrug resistant (MDRT) cases were 46.3% in 1991 and 33.5% in 1992. There was a significant difference in the time taken for defervescence (a gradual rise) between the years but between the individual drugs there was no such significant difference. Deaths were noted only in 1991 and 1992 in cases of MDRT with complications. There has been an increase in resistance of S. typhi to commonly used drugs like
ampicillin
, chloramphenicol and cotrimoxazole. S. typhi resistant to ciprofloxacin was cultured in 2 cases each from 1990-1992. Further, the time taken for defervescence with ciprofloxacin also showed a gradual rise from 3.5 days in 1990 to 6.2 days in 1992. Nevertheless, ciprofloxacin is still the drug of choice for treatment of complicated cases of MDRT.
...
PMID:Enteric fever: a changing perspective. 789 Mar 44
The increasing variety of drugs available for the treatment of bacterial infections has simultaneously increased the potential for toxicity. Neurologic toxicity of antibacterial therapy is generally underestimated in scope and severity; it may be classified as central, peripheral, or due to drug-interactions, several of which are potentially life-threatening. beta-Lactams and the quinolones are the drugs most commonly associated with seizures and
encephalopathy
. Drug-induced ototoxicity is common, and sensitive tests are now available for early diagnosis of both cochlear and vestibular toxicity. Testing in clinical practice is best restricted to subgroups at high risk. The aminoglycosides, tetracyclines, clindamycin, erythromycin, polymyxins, and possibly
ampicillin
have the potential to aggravate neuromuscular disease. Ethambutol, isoniazid, and chloramphenicol are toxic to the optic nerve; bismuth can cause a myoclonic
encephalopathy
. A number of less common and/or unusual toxicities are also discussed.
...
PMID:Neurotoxicity of antibacterial therapy. 809 Dec 48
Antibiotic therapy for infection with Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 is controversial because of the possibility of its inducing hemolytic uremic syndrome and acute
encephalopathy
. In a previous study, mice with protein-calorie malnutrition were found to be highly susceptible to this pathogen. The efficacy of oral antibiotic therapy in malnourished mice infected with O157 organisms was assessed. Mice fed a low-protein calorie diet were infected intragastrically with 2 x 10(6) colony-forming units of a Shiga-toxin-producing strain of Escherichia coli O157:H7. Infected mice were orally given a therapeutic dose of an antibiotic, including norfloxacin, fosfomycin, kanamycin,
ampicillin
, clarithromycin or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole for 3 days: mice on protocol A received the antibiotic on days 1-3, starting on the day after infection, and mice on protocol B received the antibiotic on days 3-5. The duration of fecal pathogen excretion was shorter and the toxin level in the stool and blood lower in the mice that received protocol A than in untreated mice; all of the mice treated on protocol A survived the lethal infection. All antibiotics except trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, administered on protocol B, exhibited the same effect as that exhibited by the respective antibiotic administered on protocol A. Only the mice treated with protocol B of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole had a higher toxin level in the blood than untreated controls, resulting in 95% mortality. These results suggest that the antibiotics used in this study, except for trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, could reduce the risk of hemolytic uremic syndrome and acute
encephalopathy
following Escherichia coli O157:H7 infection in humans, and that fosfomycin, in particular, may be relevant for testing in humans.
...
PMID:Efficacy of antibiotic therapy for infection with Shiga-like toxin-producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 in mice with protein-calorie malnutrition. 1051 88
The aim of this study was to evaluate epidemiological, clinical and laboratory data of shigellosis in children from northern Greece, hospitalized in our department during the period 1971-96. In total, 422 cases of shigellosis, aged 1 month to 14 y (238M, 184F) were hospitalized during the study period. The annual distribution was approximately stable until 1990, the mean number of cases per year being about 20. During the last 4 y the incidence significantly decreased. Shigella was serotyped in 138/422 cases. Seventy six of the strains were S. flexneri (55%) and 56 S. sonnei (40%). In the majority of cases the clinical picture was mild. Severe dehydration was seen in only 6 patients. Ninety four patients (22%) had extra-intestinal manifestations. Most common of these were convulsions (16%) and, less frequently, disturbances of consciousness (n = 26), rash (n = 9), shock and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (n = 2), nerve paralysis (n = 2), severe anaemia (n = 2) and haemolytic-uraemic syndrome (n = 1). Nine patients had acute
encephalopathy
of 12 h to 12 d duration. It is important to note that all these cases recovered completely with no residual neurological deficit, except for 1 girl who developed temporal epilepsy 8 y later. Spinal fluid was normal in all 42 examined patients. Antibiotics were given to 212 of 422 patients, mainly during the first half of the study period. Shigella resistance to antibiotic was significant for cotrimoxazole (24%) and
ampicillin
(16%). All patients were cured. Shigellosis is a mild disease in our area, with a decreasing prevalence.
...
PMID:Shigellosis of childhood in northern Greece: epidemiological, clinical and laboratory data of hospitalized patients during the period 1971-96. 1082 10
We report an atypical case of cat scratch disease (CSD), accompanied with
encephalopathy
that is a rare complication of CSD. A 17-year old man consulted a doctor for his right axillary lymphadenopathy. The history of his contact with cats and the sign of lymphnode swelling and fever suggested a suspect of cat scratch disease. Administration of
ampicillin
improved his clinical symptoms, but a few days later he suddenly fell into coma after an episode of convulsion. The CT scan of the brain and laboratory tests showed no significant findings except the slightly elevated cell counts and concentration of protein in his cerebrospinal fluid. He was referred to our hospital on the next day for further examinations and treatments for his coma of unknown cause. The physical examination on admission revealed slight neck stiffening and hypertonicity of his right lower limb, but radiological and laboratory tests showed no significant findings. He gradually recovered from his coma without apparent sequelae in three weeks. Indirect fluorescence antibody titers for CSD in his serum showed a significant elevation to 1:160 of IgM and 1:512 of IgG, and his clinical features were compatible to these of CSD with complications of the central nervous system.
...
PMID:[A case of cat scratch disease with encephalopathy]. 1190 96
Focal meningoencephalitis is commonly caused by Herpes simplex virus infection, which typically affects temporal or frontal lobes, and carries a mortality rate of 70% if untreated. On rare occasions, however, the infection is restricted to the brain stem. Polymerase chain reaction analysis of cerebrospinal fluid is the gold standard for the diagnosis of herpes simplex encephalitis. A 46-year-old male was admitted to the hospital with a three-day history of headache and fever up to 39 degrees C. Cerebrospinal fluid findings were in accordance with aseptic meningitis. On the third hospital day, the patient presented with double vision followed by confusion, and gaze paresis developed. The condition rapidly progressed from stupor to coma. A second examination of cerebrospinal fluid revealed a low glucose level (1.2 mmol/l) and cefotaxime with
ampicillin
were started empirically. All cerebrospinal fluid specimens were negative for bacteria and fungi. Serum IgG antibodies for herpes simplex virus type 1 were found with no intrathecal specific antibody synthesis. A polymerase chain reaction analysis of cerebrospinal fluid sample performed on the seventh day of his illness was negative for herpes simplex virus 1 and 2. A computer tomography scan of the brain did not show any abnormality. Despite antimicrobial and supportive intensive care, the condition of the patient progressively deteriorated and he died on the 11th day after admission. An autopsy revealed hemorrhagic and necrotic brainstem meningoencephalitis, and herpes simplex virus type 1 infection was confirmed by hybridization in situ. Herpes simplex virus encephalitis carries a mortality rate of 70% if untreated. The atypical location of the infection, as well as an atypical clinical manifestation with negative radiological and microbiological tests, could be the reasons for false diagnoses and mistreatment. Many authors advocate the use of empiric acyclovir in any patients with unexplained
encephalopathy
, since delay in treatment may greatly affect outcome. We describe a patient who died due to a herpes simplex virus 1 encephalitis affecting the brainstem, where nucleic acids were found post mortem by in situ hybridization. On rare occasions, the herpes simplex viral infection, as well as clinical manifestations and pathological changes, is restricted solely to the brainstem.
...
PMID:Herpes simplex virus infection limited to the brainstem. 1609 78
Listeria monocytogene is a well-recognized cause of bacteremia in immunocompromised individuals, including solid organ transplant recipients, but has been rarely reported following orthotopic liver transplantation. We describe a case of listeria meningitis that occurred within a week after liver transplantation. The patient developed a severe headache that mimicked tacrolimus
encephalopathy
, and was subsequently diagnosed with listeria meningitis by cerebrospinal fluid culture. The infection was successfully treated with three-week course of intravenous
ampicillin
. Recurrent hepatitis C followed and was successfully treated with interferon alfa and ribavirin. Fourteen cases of listeriosis after orthotopic liver transplantation have been reported in the English literature. Most reported cases were successfully treated with intravenous
ampicillin
. There were four cases of listeria meningitis, and the mortality of them was 50%. Early detection and treatment of listeria meningitis are the key to obtaining a better prognosis.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes following orthotopic liver transplantation: central nervous system involvement and review of the literature. 1770 17
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