Author:
Gilard Vianney,Beccaria Kévin,Hartley John C,Blanot Stéphane,Marqué Sophie,Bourgeois Marie,Puget Stephanie,Thompson Dominic,Zerah Michel,Tisdall Martin
Abstract
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to better characterise clinical presentation, management and outcome in infants and children with brain abscess.MethodsThe authors conducted a retrospective, multicentre study in two national reference centres over a 25-year period (1992–2017). During this period, 116 children and 28 infants (age <1 year) with brain abscess were treated.ResultsThe median age at diagnosis was 101.5 (range: 13–213) months in children and 1 (0–11) month in infants. Significant differences were observed between children and infants. The most common predisposing factor was meningitis in infants (64% of cases vs 3% in children), while it was otolaryngology-related infection in children (31% of cases vs 3.6% in infants). Infants presented more frequently with fever and meningism compared with children. 115 patients were treated with aspiration and 11 with excision. Reoperation was required in 29 children vs 1 infant. The overall mortality rate was 4% (3.4% for children, 7.1% for infants). At 3-month follow-up, the outcome was favourable in 86% of children vs in 68% of infants.ConclusionThere is a clear difference between children and infants with brain abscess in terms of predisposing factors, causative organisms and outcome. Despite surgical drainage and directed antibiotic therapy, 25% of patients with brain abscess require reoperation. Mortality is improved compared with historical series; however, long-term morbidity is significant particularly in the infant population.
Subject
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
19 articles.
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