1. Evaluation of the clinical presentations in neurobrucellosis.
- Author
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Yetkin MA, Bulut C, Erdinc FS, Oral B, and Tulek N
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Brucella melitensis isolation & purification, Brucellosis epidemiology, C-Reactive Protein cerebrospinal fluid, Confusion pathology, Diplopia pathology, Female, Headache pathology, Hospitals, Urban, Humans, Leukocytosis cerebrospinal fluid, Male, Middle Aged, Neck Muscles pathology, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Turkey epidemiology, Brucellosis complications, Central Nervous System Diseases diagnosis, Central Nervous System Diseases drug therapy, Central Nervous System Diseases epidemiology, Central Nervous System Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Background: Brucellosis is a multisystem disease that may present with a broad spectrum of clinical manifestations and complications. Neurobrucellosis is one of the complications., Methods: In this study, we describe our experience in the diagnosis, treatment, and the final outcomes of 20 patients with neurobrucellosis out of 305 patients with brucellosis, within a five-year period between January 1999 and June 2004., Results: The rate of neurobrucellosis was 6.6%. Twelve males and eight females with a mean age of 37.4 years were investigated. Fever, headache, confusion, and gait disorders were the main complaints. The duration of their complaints varied between one week and six months. On physical examination, 13 patients had fever, six had neck stiffness and confusion, three had motor deficit on either their upper or lower extremities, and four of them had diplopia. The Rose-Bengal test and standard tube agglutination tests were positive in all of the patients. Brucella melitensis was isolated from the blood of six of the 20 (30%) patients. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was analyzed in 18 patients. Pleocytosis with a mean value of 244x10(6)cells/L, and high protein levels were detected in all. A low glucose level in the CSF was detected in ten patients. Patients were treated medically and a complete resolution was achieved in all., Conclusion: Patients with a Brucella infection occasionally manifest central nervous system involvement. Clinicians, especially serving in endemic areas or serving patients coming from endemic areas should consider the likelihood of neurobrucellosis in the patients with unexplained neurological and psychiatric symptoms, and should perform the necessary tests on blood and CSF.
- Published
- 2006
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