Journal article icon

Journal article

Tuberculous meningitis: more questions, still too few answers.

Abstract:
Tuberculous meningitis is especially common in young children and people with untreated HIV infection, and it kills or disables roughly half of everyone affected. Childhood disease can be prevented by vaccination and by giving prophylactic isoniazid to children exposed to infectious adults, although improvements in worldwide tuberculosis control would lead to more effective prevention. Diagnosis is difficult because clinical features are non-specific and laboratory tests are insensitive, and treatment delay is the strongest risk factor for death. Large doses of rifampicin and fluoroquinolones might improve outcome, and the beneficial effect of adjunctive corticosteroids on survival might be augmented by aspirin and could be predicted by screening for a polymorphism in LTA4H, which encodes an enzyme involved in eicosanoid synthesis. However, these advances are insufficient in the face of drug-resistant tuberculosis and HIV co-infection. Many questions remain about the best approaches to prevent, diagnose, and treat tuberculous meningitis, and there are still too few answers.

Actions


Access Document


Publisher copy:
10.1016/s1474-4422(13)70168-6

Authors



Journal:
Lancet. Neurology More from this journal
Volume:
12
Issue:
10
Pages:
999-1010
Publication date:
2013-10-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1474-4465
ISSN:
1474-4422


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:435211
UUID:
uuid:91f4d026-78f8-4c77-9a4c-6b4a50450a53
Local pid:
pubs:435211
Source identifiers:
435211
Deposit date:
2014-02-14

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP