Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/12445
Title: Central nervous system melioidosis: A systematic review of individual participant data of case reports and case series
Authors: Wongwandee M.
Linasmita P.
Keywords: amoxicillin plus clavulanic acid
ceftazidime
chloramphenicol
cotrimoxazole
doxycycline
glucose
imipenem
meropenem
protein
alcohol consumption
antibiotic therapy
antibody titer
Article
blood culture
brain abscess
brain damage
brain stem
central nervous system infection
cerebrospinal fluid analysis
computer assisted tomography
consciousness disorder
diabetes mellitus
disease course
disease duration
encephalomyelitis
facial nerve paralysis
fever
frontal lobe
headache
human
lung infection
melioidosis
mortality
mortality rate
muscle rigidity
muscle weakness
nuclear magnetic resonance imaging
parietal lobe
pleocytosis
polymerase chain reaction
quadriplegia
seizure
skin infection
systematic review
travel
treatment duration
brain
Burkholderia pseudomallei
central nervous system infection
differential diagnosis
melioidosis
microbiology
pathogenicity
pathology
Brain
Burkholderia pseudomallei
Central Nervous System Bacterial Infections
Diagnosis, Differential
Humans
Melioidosis
Issue Date: 2019
Abstract: Background Central nervous system (CNS) melioidosis is rare. However, delayed diagnosis and treatment could lead to fatality. To identify knowledge of CNS melioidosis, we systematically review case reports and case series. Methodology/Principal findings We searched through PubMed, Web of Science and Thai-Journal Citation Index databases as well as Google Scholar with the last date on July 10, 2018. The diagnosis of CNS melioidosis had to be confirmed with culture, serology or polymerase chain reaction. We excluded the animal cases and the studies that the clinical data were not available. We identified 1170 relevant studies, while 70 studies with a total of 120 patients were analyzed. Ninety-three percent of patients were reported from the endemic area of melioidosis. Median age was 40 years (IQR 18-53), and 70% were men. A total of 60% had one or more risk factors for melioidosis. The median duration from clinical onset to diagnosis was ten days (IQR 5-25). Fever (82%), headache (54%), unilateral weakness (57%) and cranial nerve deficits (52%) are among the prominent presentation. Most patient (67%) had at least one extraneurological organ involvement. The CSF profile mostly showed mononuclear pleocytosis (64%), high protein (93%) and normal glucose (66%). The rim-enhancing pattern (78%) is the most frequent neuroimaging finding in encephalomyelitis and brain abscess patients. Both brainstem (34%) and frontal lobe (34%) are the most affected locations. Mortality rate was 20%. Conclusions/Significance This study is the most extensive systematic review of case reports and case series of CNS melioidosis in all age groups. However, the results should be cautiously interpreted due to the missing data issue. The propensity of brainstem involvement which correlates with prominent cranial nerve deficits is the characteristic of CNS melioidosis especially encephalomyelitis type. The presenting features of fever and neurological deficits (especially cranial nerve palsies) along with the mononuclear CSF pleocytosis in a patient who lives in the endemic area and also has the risk factor for melioidosis should raise the CNS melioidosis as the differential diagnosis. © 2019 Wongwandee, Linasmita.
URI: https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/12445
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85065805798&doi=10.1371%2fjournal.pntd.0007320&partnerID=40&md5=585593e040c43f4c68aeb03198b9947d
ISSN: 19352727
Appears in Collections:Scopus 1983-2021

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