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      Neurobrucellosis: clinical, diagnostic, therapeutic features and outcome. Unusual clinical presentations in an endemic region

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          Abstract

          Brucellosis is a zoonotic infection and has endemic characteristics. Neurobrucellosis is an uncommon complication of this infection. The aim of this study was to present unusual clinical manifestations and to discuss the management and outcome of a series of 18 neurobrucellosis cases. Initial clinical manifestations consist of pseudotumor cerebri in one case, white matter lesions and demyelinating syndrome in three cases, intracranial granuloma in one case, transverse myelitis in two cases, sagittal sinus thrombosis in one case, spinal arachnoiditis in one case, intracranial vasculitis in one case, in addition to meningitis in all cases. Eleven patients were male and seven were female. The most prevalent symptoms were headache (83%) and fever (44%). All patients were treated with rifampicin, doxycycline plus trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or ceftriaxone. Duration of treatment (varied 3-12 months) was determined on basis of the CSF response. In four patients presented with left mild sequelae including aphasia, hearing loss, hemiparesis. In conclusion, although mortality is rare in neurobrucellosis, its sequelae are significant. In neurobrucellosis various clinical and neuroradiologic signs and symptoms can be confused with other neurologic diseases. In inhabitants or visitors of endemic areas, neurobrucellosis should be kept in mind in cases that have unusual neurological manifestations.

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          Most cited references31

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          Complications associated with Brucella melitensis infection: a study of 530 cases.

          We carried out a prospective study of 530 patients older than 14 years of age with brucellosis. We describe the incidence and clinical features of the focal forms of the disease, analyzing some of the possible factors associated with their appearance. One hundred sixty-nine patients (31.9%) had a focal form or complication. Osteoarticular complications were the most frequent, totaling 113 cases (66%), followed by genitourinary with 18 cases (5.1% of males), hepatic (2.5%), neurologic (1.7%), and heart (1.5%). Nine patients (1.7%) had more than 1 complication. In a multivariate analysis, diagnostic delay greater than 30 days (OR 2.0), ESR > 40 mm/hr (OR 1.9), and levels of alpha-2 globulin > 7.5 g/L (OR 6.8) were statistically significant independent variables associated with the presence of focal forms. Twenty-five patients with complications (14.8%) required surgical treatment. The relapse rate was 3.6% for those patients without complications and 4.1% for patients with focal forms (p > 0.05). However, when therapeutic failure, relapses, and mortality were considered together, the risk of an unfavorable evolution was significantly greater in patients with focal forms (10.6% versus 3.6% in patients without complications; OR 1.9, 95% CI 1.4-7.1, p < 0.005). Given the worse prognosis, knowledge and early diagnosis of the focal forms of B. melitensis infection is especially important.
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            Principles of antibiotic therapy in severe infections: optimizing the therapeutic approach by use of laboratory and clinical data.

            The increasingly daunting problem of antimicrobial resistance has led to an intense focus on optimization of antibiotic therapy, with simultaneous goals of improving patient outcomes and minimizing the contribution of that therapy to making the available antibiotics obsolete. Although even appropriate antibiotic therapy drives resistance, inappropriate therapy may also have adverse effects on the individual patient, as well as on the bacterial ecology. Recent research has validated the benefit of intelligent utilization of both microbiological data and clinical assessment in the empirical selection of initial broad-spectrum therapy and in further guidance of therapeutic decisions throughout the course of illness by use of a systems approach. Thus, the optimal approach to the critically ill patient with infection involves the initiation of aggressive broad-spectrum empirical therapy followed by timely responses to microbiological and clinical results as they become available. An appropriate response to this information often involves de-escalation of therapy or even its discontinuation.
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              Neurobrucellosis: clinical and therapeutic features.

              Eighteen patients with neurobrucellosis are described. Eleven patients had meningitis alone or with papilledema, optic neuropathy, or radiculopathy. Four patients had meningovascular complications manifested by stroke or intracerebral hemorrhage from a presumed mycotic aneurysm. Two patients had parenchymatous dysfunction, including a child who had a cerebellar syndrome without evidence of direct infection of the central nervous system. One patient presented with polyradiculopathy. Twelve of 16 patients had pleocytosis; none had cell counts greater than 419 x 10(6)/L. Most patients had hypoglycorrhachia and elevated levels of protein in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Results of an agglutination test for Brucella in serum were positive for all patients. Six of 16 patients had positive blood cultures, and four of 14 had positive CSF cultures. Antimicrobial treatment included concurrent administration of two or more of the following drugs: streptomycin, tetracycline (or doxycycline), rifampin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Eleven patients fully recovered. Five patients were left with residual neurological deficits. Four of these patients suffered permanent hearing loss, one of whom also had significant loss of vision in one eye. One elderly senile patient with meningovascular brucellosis remained in a vegetative state despite receiving antimicrobial therapy for 6 months. One patient died due to rupture of a mycotic aneurysm within 7 days of initiation of therapy. One other patient was treated after sustaining an intracerebral hemorrhage, but this patient's condition was diagnosed only after discharge.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                bjid
                Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases
                Braz J Infect Dis
                Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases (Salvador, BA, Brazil )
                1413-8670
                1678-4391
                February 2011
                : 15
                : 1
                : 52-59
                Affiliations
                [02] Istanbul orgnameHaydarpasa Numune Training and Research Hospital Turkey
                [01] Istanbul orgnameHaydarpasa Numune Training and Research Hospital orgdiv1Department of Infectious Diseases Turkey
                Article
                S1413-86702011000100010 S1413-8670(11)01500110
                10.1590/S1413-86702011000100010
                21412590
                34bf9e95-e551-4d44-834b-8a0f9bcd8820

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 28 September 2010
                : 02 March 2010
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 30, Pages: 8
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                Brief Communication

                diagnosis,neuroimaging,serology,neurobrucellosis
                diagnosis, neuroimaging, serology, neurobrucellosis

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