首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Acute bacterial meningitis in children admitted to a rural Kenyan hospital: incre...
Acute bacterial meningitis in children admitted to a rural Kenyan hospital: increasing antibiotic resistance and outcome

 

作者: ISAIAH,   MWANGI JAMES,   BERKLEY BRETT,   LOWE NORBERT,   PESHU KEVIN,   MARSH CHARLES,  

 

期刊: The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal  (OVID Available online 2002)
卷期: Volume 21, issue 11  

页码: 1042-1048

 

ISSN:0891-3668

 

年代: 2002

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: Childhood meningitis;outcome;antibiotic resistance;rural;Kenya

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Background.Acute bacterial meningitis (ABM) is an important cause of mortality in Africa, but most studies are based in urban referral hospitals. Poor laboratory facilities make diagnosis difficult, and treatment is limited to inexpensive antibiotics.Methods.We retrospectively reviewed data from children admitted with ABM to a Kenyan district hospital from 1994 through 2000. We calculated the minimum incidence in children admitted from a defined area. We also examined the antibiotic susceptibility patterns.Results.We identified 390 cases (1.3% of all admissions) of whom 88% were <5 years old. The apparent minimum annual incidence in children younger than 5 years of age increased from 120 to 202 per 100 000 between 1995 and 2000 (P< 0.001). Increasing the lumbar punctures performed by including prostrated or convulsing children significantly increased the number of cases detected (P< 0.005). The most common organisms in infants <3 months were streptococci and Enterobacteriaceae. Streptococcus pneumoniae(43.1%) andHaemophilus influenzae(41.9%) were predominant in the postneonatal period. The overall mortality was 30.1%, and 23.5% of survivors developed neurologic sequelae. Chloramphenicol resistance ofH. influenzaerose from 8% in 1994 to 80% in 2000 (P< 0.0001) accompanied by an apparent increase in mortality. A short history, impaired consciousness and hypoglycemia were associated with death. Prolonged coma and low cerebrospinal fluid glucose were associated with neurologic sequelae.Conclusion.ABM in rural Kenya is a severe illness with substantial mortality and morbidity. Prognosis could be improved by broadening the criteria for lumbar puncture and use of appropriate antibiotics.

 



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