The management of pediatric patients with severe head trauma often requires aggressive physiologic monitoring and treatment. As intracranial pressure (ICP) increases, so does mortality. Yet attempts to decrease elevated ICP can cause physiologic and hemodynamic problems. In this retrospective analysis of 25 patients treated with ICP monitoring alone, ICP measurements plus mannitol, or ICP measurements plus pentobarbital (PB) induced coma/mannitol, survival rates were higher than predicted, particularly among the most severely injured. These results were apparently due to the intensive care and aggressive monitoring. Although barbiturates are known to decrease ICP, the adverse effects encountered, including hypotension, cardiovascular depression and arrhythmias, often outweigh the benefits. Hemodynamic abnormalities are unpredictable and monitoring with Swan-Ganz catheter is useful in managing patients with PB-induced comas. Many failures of PB therapy in pediatric patients may be related to undiagnosed decreases in cardiac output, resulting in decreased cerebral blood flow, even with well-controlled ICP.
The authors report two cases of Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD), an illness of unknown pathogenesis. Generally, this disease process involves the metaphyseal and diaphyseal portions of the long bones, the lungs, and the retroperitoneum; however, other tissues may be involved including the central nervous system (CNS). To date only two cases of CNS-related ECD have been reported. The present report adds to the literature by documenting two more recent cases of ECD involving the CNS. The clinical presentations of these cases, their radiological findings with special reference to magnetic resonance imaging, pathological determination, and clinical management are briefly reviewed.
Patients in good clinical condition with symptomatic cerebral aneurysms were commonly misdiagnosed. Misdiagnosed patients were more likely than correctly diagnosed patients to deteriorate clinically and had a worse overall outcome. Misdiagnosed cases accounted for a significant fraction of overall poor outcomes among consecutive cases of symptomatic aneurysms.
In the summer of 1978, two children who had recently been swimming in freshwater lakes in Florida died from primary amoebic meningoencephalitis. Despite early and intensive treatment with amphotericin B, both patients died three to five days after the onset of illness. Amoebae were observed in wet preparations of cerebrospinal fluid and in sections of cerebral tissue and were identified as Naegleria fowleri by the indirect immunofluorescent antibody technique. The amoebae were highly virulent in mice. The isolate of N. fowleri was extremely sensitive in vitro to amphotericin B (minimal inhibitory concentration [MIC], 0.15 microgram/ml), somewhat sensitive to miconazole (MIC, 25 micrograms/ml), and resistant to rifampin (MIC, less than or equal to 100 micrograms/ml). Treatment with amphotericin B (7.5 mg/kg of body weight per day) administered intraperitoneally protected 60% of the mice. Lower doses of amphotericin B alone or in combination with miconazole (100 mg/kg) or rifampin (220 mg/kg) were not protective. These results suggest that amphotericin B remains the single effective agent in treatment of primary amoebic meningoencephalitis.
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