Surgically cured, relapsed pneumococcal meningitis due to bone defects, non-invasively identified by three-dimensional multi-detector computed tomography

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Abstract

A 43-year-old Japanese man presented with a history of bacterial meningitis (BM). He was admitted to our department with a one-day history of headache and was diagnosed with relapse of BM based on the cerebrospinal fluid findings. The conventional imaging studies showed serial findings suggesting left otitis media, a temporal cephalocele, and meningitis. Three-dimensional multi-detector computed tomography (3D-MDCT) showed left petrous bone defects caused by the otitis media, and curative surgical treatment was performed. Skull bone structural abnormalities should be considered a cause of relapsed BM. 3D-MDCT was useful for revealing the causal minimal bone abnormality and performing pre-surgical mapping.

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Akimoto, T., Morita, A., Shiobara, K., Hara, M., Minami, M., Shijo, K., … Kamei, S. (2016). Surgically cured, relapsed pneumococcal meningitis due to bone defects, non-invasively identified by three-dimensional multi-detector computed tomography. Internal Medicine, 55(24), 3665–3669. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.55.7299

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