Displaying all 9 publications

Abstract:
Sort:
  1. Chye GH, Hong ST
    Med J Malaysia, 1975 Mar;30(3):219-22.
    PMID: 1160682
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology*
  2. ROSS RR, DEAN D
    Br Med J, 1957 Sep 14;2(5045):627.
    PMID: 13460339
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology*
  3. MUIR CS, RANSOME GA
    Med J Malaya, 1959 Dec;14:125-34.
    PMID: 14425049
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology*
  4. Pathmanathan R, Soo-Hoo Tuck Soon
    Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 1982;76(1):21-4.
    PMID: 7080152
    Between January 1974 and June 1980, 85 cases of cryptococcosis were diagnosed in the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The diagnosis was based on positive culture of the organism in 81 cases; the remaining four were diagnosed on histopathological findings. Cerebral cryptococcosis was the most common presentation and Chinese are particularly susceptible (72% of cases). The incidence of the disease is shown to be far greater than previously suspected. Association with compromised host status is uncommon (14%). The local literature is briefly reviewed and the findings discussed.
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology
  5. Lim VKE, Talib S
    Med J Malaysia, 1982 Mar;37(1):11-3.
    PMID: 6981750
    A case of neonatal meningitis caused by an unusual organism, Acinetobacter calcoaceticus var anitratus is reported. The source of the meningitis is probably a scalp abscess caused by the same organism. This patient was successfully treated with cotrimoxazole. Infections caused by Acinetobacter are rare and are briefly reviewed in this article
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology
  6. Suleiman AB, Musa Z, Morad Z
    Ann Acad Med Singap, 1988 Jul;17(3):454-6.
    PMID: 3064705
    Ten out of 237 patients who underwent renal transplantation between 1975 and October 1986 developed tuberculosis. Most patients presented with vague symptoms, and typical symptoms commonly associated with tuberculosis were not common. Six had positive urine cultures. One patient had positive sputum and urine cultures and one had positive sputum and cerebrospinal fluid cultures for tuberculosis. In this last patient cryptococcus was also cultured from the sputum and CSF. Nine of the 10 patients responded well to antituberculosis therapy and was cured of the infection. The patient with associated cryptococcal infection died 2 months after presentation. Side effects of antituberculous therapy was minimal and easily resolved on stopping the offending drug.
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology
  7. Tan HJ, Raymond AA, Phadke PP, Rozman Z
    Singapore Med J, 2004 Jul;45(7):337-9.
    PMID: 15221051
    Symptomatic rheumatoid pachymeningitis is a rare extra-articular manifestation of rheumatoid arthritis. Clinical symptoms are non-specific and diagnosis is frequently made by exclusion. We present a 61-year-old woman with a 9-year history of rheumatoid arthritis presenting with deafness and progressive disability over a two month duration. She was diagnosed as having rheumatoid pachymeningitis based on the cerebral magnetic resonance imaging findings.
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology*
  8. Said H, Cheah F, Mohamed AS, Hadi AR
    Med J Malaysia, 1993 Jun;48(2):222-4.
    PMID: 8350800
    The transseptal transsphenoidal hypophysectomy has become a relatively frequent procedure in recent years. We performed 20 such procedures between January 1984 and December 1987 for various pituitary disorders. Significant complications such as CSF rhinorrhea, meningitis, diabetes insipidus, haemorrhage and septal perforation are discussed. The mortality rate for the series was 5%. In analysing the data, we feel that this technique of hypophysectomy is a safe procedure.
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology
  9. Kliks MM, Palumbo NE
    Soc Sci Med, 1992 Jan;34(2):199-212.
    PMID: 1738873 DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(92)90097-A
    The principal etiologic agent of human eosinophilic meningitis, Angiostrongylus cantonensis, was first detected in rats in Canton, China in 1933. The first human case was detected on Taiwan in 1944. Epidemic outbreaks were noted on Ponape (E. Caroline Is.) from 1944 to 1948. The disease may present as transient meningitis or a more severe disease involving the brain, spinal cord and nerve roots, with a characteristic eosinophilia of the peripheral blood and CSF. Since 1961 it has been known that human infections are usually acquired by purposeful or accidental ingestion of infective larvae in terrestrial mollusks, planaria and fresh-water crustacea. There is no effective specific treatment. The African land snail, Achatina fulica played an important role in the panpacific dispersal of the organism: it will be important in Africa in the future as well. Rats were, and will continue to be the principal agents of expansion of the parasite beyond the Indopacific area. During and just after WWII the parasite was introduced, and/or spread passively from South and Southeast Asia into the Western Pacific islands and eastward and southward through Micronesia, Melanesia, Australia and into Polynesia, sequestered in shipments of war material and facilitated by post-war commerce. In the 1950s numerous cases were identified for the first time on Sumatra, the Philippines, Taiwan, Saipan, New Caledonia, and as far east as Rarotonga and Tahiti. Then cases were detected in Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Java, Sarawak, the New Hebrides, Guam and Hawaii during the 1960s. Subsequently in the Pacific Basin the disease has appeared on Okinawa, other Ryukyu islands, Honshu, Kyushu, New Britain, American Samoa and Western Samoa, Australia, Hong Kong, Bombay, India, Fiji and most recently in mainland China. The parasite in rats now occurs throughout the Indopacific Basin and littoral. Beyond the Indopacific region, the worm has been found in rodents in Madagascar (ca 1963), Cuba (1973), Egypt (1977), Puerto Rico (1984), New Orleans, Louisiana (1985) and Port Harcourt, Nigeria (1989). Human infections have now been detected in Cuba (1973), Réunion Island (1974) and Côte d'Ivoire (1979) and should be anticipated wherever infected rats of mollusks have been introduced. Caged primates became infected in zoos in Hong Kong (1978) and New Orleans and Nassau, Bahamas (1987). The use of mollusks and crustacea as famine foods, favored delicacies and medicines has resulted in numerous outbreaks and isolated infections. Economic and political instability, illicit trade, unsanitary peridomestic conditions and lack of health education promote the local occurrence and insidious global expansion of parasitic eosinophilic meningitis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
    Matched MeSH terms: Meningitis/etiology*
Filters
Contact Us

Please provide feedback to Administrator (afdal@afpm.org.my)

External Links