Cases reported "Meningitis"

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1/45. Cerebral herniation after lumbar puncture in sarcoid meningitis.

    A patient with chronic meningitis due to neurosarcoidosis became comatose within minutes of a lumbar puncture and died 24 h later. The diagnosis of neurosarcoidosis was made post mortem. Development of cerebral herniation may have been exacerbated by lumbar puncture. It was proposed that arachnoid villi dysfunction may have contributed to very high intracranial pressures in this patient, since post mortem examination revealed communication between the ventricles and outlet foramina of the fourth ventricle, and that herniation was in part due to an acute pressure differential caused by lumbar puncture.
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2/45. Simultaneous subdural effusion and hydrocephalus in infancy.

    hydrocephalus and subdural hematoma or effusion of infancy rarely present simultaneously, where both are active contributors to acutely increased intracranial pressure. In three cases, clinical findings characteristic of both were present. decompression of one can facilitate expansion of the other. Rapid progression of unsuspected hydrocephalus could be responsible for some of the poor results reported after treatment of subdural effusion alone. This possibility should be considered whenever progress is unsatisfactory during treatment of subdural effusion.
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3/45. Hypertrophic chronic pachymeningitis as a localized immune process in the craniocervical region.

    Hypertrophic chronic pachymeningitis (HCP) is a rare disorder that causes intracranial or spinal thickening of the dura mater. This report describes a patient with progressive HCP in the craniocervical region associated with signs of rheumatic disease. A ventricular-atrial shunt had to be inserted because of increased intracranial pressure. The patient improved after suboccipital craniotomy, C1 to C6 laminectomy, and removal of the thickened dura. Additional therapy with methotrexate stopped progression, which was documented by MRI and PET.
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4/45. Case report. recurrence of increased intracranial pressure with antiretroviral therapy in an AIDS patient with cryptococcal meningitis.

    We present the case of an AIDS patient with cryptococcal meningitis who, after an excellent clinical and mycological response to antifungal therapy, developed an exacerbation of signs and symptoms, including elevated intracranial pressure and an increase in cerebrospinal fluid cryptococcal antigen and white blood cells, following the initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Cultures yielded no growth and the patient responded to repeated lumbar punctures without changing or intensifying antifungal therapy. To our knowledge, this is the first report of symptomatic elevated intracranial pressure occurring during HAART-related immune recovery in a patient with cryptococcal meningitis. Exacerbation of symptoms does not necessarily reflect mycological failure that requires a change in antifungal therapy, but may relate to acutely increased intracranial pressure that will respond to simple measures, such as repeated lumbar punctures.
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5/45. posture-related headaches and pachymeningeal enhancement in CSF leaks from craniotomy site.

    cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak is recognized to cause headaches that typically but not invariably have orthostatic features (present in upright posture, relieved by recumbency). head magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) typically shows diffuse pachymeningeal enhancement. A 24-year-old woman, after resection of a right temporoparietal glioma, developed CSF leak from the craniotomy site, resulting in subgaleal fluid collection and associated with diffuse pachymeningeal gadolinium enhancement as well as posture-related headaches. The headaches, however, were present in a recumbent position and relieved after several minutes of being in an upright position. It is postulated that CSF leak took place when the patient was recumbent and ceased when she was upright, a position in which there is decrease in intracranial pressure. After cessation of the leak, along with disappearance of subgaleal collection of CSF, both the headaches and the pachymeningeal enhancement resolved.
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6/45. MR demonstration of brain abscess rupture into the subarachnoid space and its possible implication in management.

    BACKGROUND: rupture of brain abscess into the subarachnoid space as a cause of meningitis is rare. early diagnosis improves the outcome. There is no previous report of MR demonstration of rupture of brain abscess into the subarachnoid space. CASE DESCRIPTION: Two young adults with chronic suppurative otitis media presenting with signs of increased intracranial pressure and meningeal irritation underwent magnetic resonance imaging, which showed brain abscess with evidence of rupture into the subarachnoid space and meningitis. This helped in early diagnosis and aggressive management. CONCLUSION: In cases of brain abscess where meningitis is suspected clinically, documentation of rupture of the abscess into the subarachnoid space will help in avoiding cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination that may be disastrous in these patients who already have increased intracranial pressure.
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7/45. confusion as the presenting manifestation of vertebral osteomyelitis: a case report.

    A 44-year-old patient presented with increasing confusion. He was first diagnosed as having intermittent pressure hydrocephalus but a further evaluation showed CSF pleocytosis and hypoglycorrhachia. Five weeks later, his physical examination was unrevealing. Nuclear imaging techniques were conflicting, with negative gallium- and indium-labelled white blood cells scans but a Tc scan pointing towards a vertebral infection. A well-demarcated lesion in the T9 vertebral body, demonstrated by CT scan, confirmed the diagnosis of vertebral osteomyelitis. Although we were unable to recover the causative organism, antibiotic treatment for presumed staphylococcal osteomyelitis resulted in full recovery. This case indicates that vertebral osteomyelitis may cause significant meningeal inflammation even in the absence of epidural or subdural abscess. We recommend that in patients with meningitis without a clear etiology vertebral osteomyelitis should be considered and pursued with CT scannings of the vertebrae, a procedure that can yield positive findings even when other scanning modalities are negative.
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8/45. Lethal otogenic Candida meningitis.

    history revealed a chronic obstructive pulmonary condition which had been treated with prednisolone for a long time. There was a raised temperature with further signs of an acute inflammatory underlying disease and internal hydrocephalus. After performing trepanation, the symptoms of raised intercerebral pressure ceased. candida albicans could be detected microbiologically in the cerebrospinal fluid. There was no pneumonia at the time of admission. Despite instituting immediate intensive care with administration of antibiotics and antimycotics, the patient died 11 days after inpatient admission. autopsy revealed a C. albicans mycosis originating from the right middle ear with extensive suppurative meningitis, which was the immediate cause of death. Confluent bronchopneumonia had developed in both lower lung lobes at the time of death, but did not show any signs of mycosis and had contributed indirectly to the death of the patient.
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9/45. Idiopathic chronic hypertrophic pachymeningitis causing thoracic cord compression.

    Chronic idiopathic pachymeningitis is a rare cause of compressive myelopathy, especially of the thoracic spinal cord. The hypertrophic dura causes symptoms either by pressure on the spinal cord or by vascular compromise. The authors report the diagnostic dilemmas in a 48-year-old lady who presented with progressive spastic paraparesis of 4 months duration. MRI showed an extradural hypointense band, surrounding and flattening the thoracic cord in the anteroposterior direction, extending from C7 to T11. Neither the CT scan nor the myelogram provided any clue to the diagnosis. A T1-T10 laminectomy was performed. The dura was hypertrophied and found compressing the cord. The posterior dura was excised and the spinal cord was decompressed. The histopathology showed hypertrophic pachymeningitis. The patient improved neurologically. She was started empirically on anti-tubercular chemotherapy, though she was serologically negative for all known causes of pachymeningitis.
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10/45. cerebrospinal fluid leak and meningitis associated with nasal continuous positive airway pressure therapy.

    Clear rhinorrhea is a common symptom in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and may worsen with continuous positive airway pressure therapy. Clear rhinorrhea can also be the presenting symptom of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak, which is evidence of a communication between the subarachnoid space and the nasal cavity or sinuses. While CSF leak has been reported to occur with nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) therapy following trauma to the skull base, its association with OSA and nCPAP therapy in the absence of trauma has not been previously described. We report two patients with OSA in whom CSF leak developed following the institution of nCPAP therapy. In one patient, the rhinorrhea was complicated by meningitis. Both patients underwent successful repair of their defects. One patient successfully restarted nCPAP therapy, while the other refused it.
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