Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome

Forty-two patients diagnosed with tuberculous meningitis in Kuala Lumpur Hospital based on clinical criteria, cerebrospinal fluid analysis and response to antituberculous treatment over a seven year period were included in this study. Relevant information was obtained from pa-tients’ medical case no...

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Main Authors: Al-Edrus, Sharifah Aishah, Muda, Ahmad Sobri, M, Nordiyana, Merican, J.S.
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: CENTAURO S.r.l. BOLOGNA 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17489/1/Tuberculous%20meningitis.pdf
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author Al-Edrus, Sharifah Aishah
Muda, Ahmad Sobri
M, Nordiyana
Merican, J.S.
author_facet Al-Edrus, Sharifah Aishah
Muda, Ahmad Sobri
M, Nordiyana
Merican, J.S.
author_sort Al-Edrus, Sharifah Aishah
collection UPM
description Forty-two patients diagnosed with tuberculous meningitis in Kuala Lumpur Hospital based on clinical criteria, cerebrospinal fluid analysis and response to antituberculous treatment over a seven year period were included in this study. Relevant information was obtained from pa-tients’ medical case notes and neuroimaging findings were evaluated. The clinical presentation of pa-tients was staged according to Medical Research Council for tuberculous meningitis. Fisher’s Exact Test was used to determine the correlation between the neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome of patients. 52.4% of patients had stage 2 disease, 28.6% stage 3 and the remainder stage1 disease. 95.2% of patients had various neuroimaging abnormalities and only 4.8% had normalneuroimaging findings. The commonest neuroimaging findings were hydrocephalus and meningealenhancement. 47.6% of patients survived without any complication. 23.8% developed morbidity ei-ther with minor or major neurological deficit and 28.6% had died at the end of the study period.Among patients with negative neuroimaging findings, one died and another one survived withoutany complication. Among patients with abnormal neuroimaging findings, 25% developed morbidity,27.5% died and 47.5% survived without complication. The only neuroimaging feature significantlycorrelated with clinical outcome was the presence of hydrocephalus. Therefore, hydrocephalus isimportant in the prognosis of the disease and should be considered an indicator of poor clinical out-come. There was no significant correlation between clinical staging and clinical outcome, nor wasthere a significant correlation between clinical staging and individual neuroimaging features
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spelling upm.eprints-174892015-12-09T01:17:37Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17489/ Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome Al-Edrus, Sharifah Aishah Muda, Ahmad Sobri M, Nordiyana Merican, J.S. Forty-two patients diagnosed with tuberculous meningitis in Kuala Lumpur Hospital based on clinical criteria, cerebrospinal fluid analysis and response to antituberculous treatment over a seven year period were included in this study. Relevant information was obtained from pa-tients’ medical case notes and neuroimaging findings were evaluated. The clinical presentation of pa-tients was staged according to Medical Research Council for tuberculous meningitis. Fisher’s Exact Test was used to determine the correlation between the neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome of patients. 52.4% of patients had stage 2 disease, 28.6% stage 3 and the remainder stage1 disease. 95.2% of patients had various neuroimaging abnormalities and only 4.8% had normalneuroimaging findings. The commonest neuroimaging findings were hydrocephalus and meningealenhancement. 47.6% of patients survived without any complication. 23.8% developed morbidity ei-ther with minor or major neurological deficit and 28.6% had died at the end of the study period.Among patients with negative neuroimaging findings, one died and another one survived withoutany complication. Among patients with abnormal neuroimaging findings, 25% developed morbidity,27.5% died and 47.5% survived without complication. The only neuroimaging feature significantlycorrelated with clinical outcome was the presence of hydrocephalus. Therefore, hydrocephalus isimportant in the prognosis of the disease and should be considered an indicator of poor clinical out-come. There was no significant correlation between clinical staging and clinical outcome, nor wasthere a significant correlation between clinical staging and individual neuroimaging features CENTAURO S.r.l. BOLOGNA 2007 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17489/1/Tuberculous%20meningitis.pdf Al-Edrus, Sharifah Aishah and Muda, Ahmad Sobri and M, Nordiyana and Merican, J.S. (2007) Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome. Neuroradiology Journal, 20 (5). pp. 517-524. ISSN 1971-4009 Tuberculosis Malaysia Tuberculosis, Meningeal Antitubercular agents English
spellingShingle Tuberculosis Malaysia
Tuberculosis, Meningeal
Antitubercular agents
Al-Edrus, Sharifah Aishah
Muda, Ahmad Sobri
M, Nordiyana
Merican, J.S.
Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome
title Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome
title_full Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome
title_fullStr Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome
title_full_unstemmed Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome
title_short Tuberculous meningitis: neuroimaging features, clinical staging and outcome
title_sort tuberculous meningitis neuroimaging features clinical staging and outcome
topic Tuberculosis Malaysia
Tuberculosis, Meningeal
Antitubercular agents
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17489/1/Tuberculous%20meningitis.pdf
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AT mnordiyana tuberculousmeningitisneuroimagingfeaturesclinicalstagingandoutcome
AT mericanjs tuberculousmeningitisneuroimagingfeaturesclinicalstagingandoutcome