| Literature DB >> 29094233 |
Shanying Mo1, Liuhua Wei1, Hongmou Chen2, Rui Li3, Shuping Li4, Guolan Luo5.
Abstract
Streptococcal Species is increasingly recognized as a potentially preventable emerging infection in human's brain with high prevalence around the world. Streptococcus constellatus is one of the most common pathogens. Meanwhile, anaerobic bacteria are the rare causes for intracranial infection. To date, intracranial mixed infection caused by Prevotella intermedia and Streptococcus constellatus has not been reported. We reported a Chinese case to raise the global awareness of severity of the intracranial mixed infection. Here, we illustrated the epidemiological risk factors, clinical manifestations and outcomes of the patient. For patients who suffer from exacerbated brain infection with fetid cerebrospinal fluid, early repeated imaging is urgently needed and empiric antibiotic therapy should consider anaerobic and aerobic bacteria in these situations.Entities:
Keywords: CT; China; Intracranial mixed infection; MRI; Prevotella intermedia; Streptococcus constellatus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29094233 PMCID: PMC5769824 DOI: 10.1007/s11011-017-0142-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metab Brain Dis ISSN: 0885-7490 Impact factor: 3.584
Fig. 1a-f Brain MRI revealed the left hemisphere swelled, whose cerebral sulcus and schizencephaly shallowed, especially in cerebral cortex, with patchy signal intensity which was gyriform on brain T2-weighted imaging (T2WI) and slightly high by fluid attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR); the left frontal lobe, whose internal annular signal intensity was high on T1WI, low on T2WI and low on FLAIR was observed with patchy signal intensity that was slightly low on T1-weighted images (T1WI), slightly high on T2WI and high on FLAIR; the left falx was observed with striped signal intensity that was low on T1WI, high on T2WI and low on FLAIR. g MRV showed that straight sinuses were not clearly seen and superior sagittal sinus was not clear enough to be seen with rough cerebrovascular walls and focal luminal stenosis. h The cranial MRA showed no obvious abnormalities
Results of blood tests
| Item | Day 2 | Day 3 | Reference interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| White blood cell | 9.51 | 28.28 | (3.97–9.15) × 109/L |
| Neutrophils | 9.01 | 25.57 | (2–7.5)× 109/L |
| CRP | >200 | >200 | <10 mg/L |
Results of blood gas tests
| Item | Day 2 | Day 3–1 | Day 3–2 | Reference interval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PH | 7.515 | 7.452 | 7.629 | 7.35–7.45 |
| PCO2 | 24.2 | 30.3 | 13.8 | 35-45 mmHg |
| PO2 | 113.7 | 119.1 | 58.7 | 80-100 mmHg |
Results of HBV (TRFIA)
| Item | Quantitative results | Reference interval |
|---|---|---|
| HBsAg | 0.000 | 0–0.2 ng/ml |
| HBsAb | >640.000 | 0-10mIU/ml |
| HBeAg | 0.000 | 0–0.5 PEIU/ml |
| HBeAb | 0.560 | 0–0.2 PEIU/ml |
| HBcAb | 5.661 | 0–0.9 PEIU/ml |
Fig. 2Compared with the pre-treatment MR(Fig. 2a T2WI, Fig. 2b T1WI), the post-treatment CT (Fig. 2c) revealed aggravated swelling of the left cerebral hemisphere, especially in cerebral cortex, shallowing of cerebral sulcus and schizencephaly, narrowing of the left lateral ventricle due to compression. The midline structure had shifted to the right obviously,which indicated cerebral hernia was developed