Four pediatric neurosurgical patients with Gram-negative meningitis and ventriculitis were treated with parenteral and intraventricular amikacin, a new aminoglycoside. The organisms infecting these patients were resistant to multiple antimicrobial drugs but were sensitive to amikacin. Treatment was continued for 14 days after cerebrospinal fluid cultures became negative. All four patients were cured and have demonstrated no nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity, or evidence of persistent infection on follow-up examination.
A 71-year-old woman with progressive hemiparesis had a large cerebral calculus (brain stone) removed from the temporal lobe. Her condition thereafter improved remarkably. The differential diagnosis and specific methods to determine the angiomatous nature of this almost acellular mass are discussed. Reticulin impregnation, elastic tissue stain, and electron microscopy were of greatest value.
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