Author:
Benadji Amine,Debroucker Thomas,Martin-Blondel Guillaume,Argaud Laurent,Vitrat Virginie,Biron Charlotte,Wolff Michel,Hoen Bruno,Duval Xavier,Tubiana Sarah
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Community-acquired bacterial meningitis is a rare but severe central nervous system infection that may be associated with cerebrovascular complications (CVC). Our objective is to assess the prevalence of CVC in patients with community-acquired bacterial meningitis and to determine the first-48 h factors associated with CVC.
Methods
We analyzed data from the prospective multicenter cohort study (COMBAT) including, between February 2013 and July 2015, adults with community-acquired bacterial meningitis. CVC were defined by the presence of clinical or radiological signs (on cerebral CT or MRI) of focal clinical symptom. Factors associated with CVC were identified by multivariate logistic regression.
Results
CVC occurred in 128 (25.3%) of the 506 patients in the COMBAT cohort (78 (29.4%) of the 265 pneumococcal meningitis, 17 (15.3%) of the 111 meningococcal meningitis, and 29 (24.8%) of the 117 meningitis caused by other bacteria). The proportion of patients receiving adjunctive dexamethasone was not statistically different between patients with and without CVC (p = 0.84). In the multivariate analysis, advanced age (OR = 1.01 [1.00-1.03], p = 0.03), altered mental status at admission (OR = 2.23 [1.21–4.10], p = 0.01) and seizure during the first 48 h from admission (OR = 1.90 [1.01–3.52], p = 0.04) were independently associated with CVC.
Conclusions
CVC were frequent during community-acquired bacterial meningitis and associated with advanced age, altered mental status and seizures occurring within 48 h from admission but not with adjunctive corticosteroids.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Cerebrovascular Complications in Bacterial Meningitis;Stroke: Vascular and Interventional Neurology;2024-08-26