Complicated Pneumococcal Meningitis: A Diagnostic and Therapeutic Challenge

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Abstract

Meningitis is an uncommon complication of head trauma. Vasculitis in bacterial meningitis is seen in 9-25% of adults while neurological deficits in bacterial meningitis are seen in about one-third of children. We report a 5-year-old boy, previously healthy who was admitted in March 2019 to Latifa Women's and Children's Hospital, Dubai, UAE, with pneumococcal meningitis. One day before presentation, he had a history of fall with head trauma while running at school. Initial brain CT scan was normal. Few hours after admission, the child was noticed to be drowsy with cold extremities and mottled skin. He was shifted to PICU and, ultimately, he required intubation and mechanical ventilation. The child continued spiking high-grade fever with deterioration in the neurologic status. His GCS deteriorated to 4/15 with decerebrations posture. He underwent serial brain imaging which revealed multiple chronic infarcts with hydrocephalic changes due to ongoing cerebral vasculitis. The child was started on steroid therapy on 28 April 2019 after which his condition improved at an incredible pace.

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APA

Al-Doory, S. A., Magzoub, A., Pawar, N., Radaideh, M., Saleh, S. M., Al Sabbah, M. A., & Mir, F. (2021). Complicated Pneumococcal Meningitis: A Diagnostic and Therapeutic Challenge. Dubai Medical Journal, 4(2), 112–116. https://doi.org/10.1159/000516806

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