Throat Culture from Patients with Meningococcal Meningitis

Abstract

Throat culture from patients with meningococcal meningitis: Cartwright and Jones suggest that throat culture can be useful in the diagnosis of meningococcal meningitis when the patients have taken antibiotics before admission into hospital. This approach seems valid in the light of the inability of most of the antibiotics that are used for the treatment of meningococcal infections to serve as prophylactic agents. We performed throat cultures on various populations in Cairo, Egypt, where group A meningococcal disease in endemic. Most cases occur in school-age children, a population that we found had a 3.8% carrier rate. Only one of the 58 patients positive by culture of cerebrospinal fluid for agents other than Neisseria was a group A meningococci carrier. Group A meningococci, however, were isolated from 55% of 380 patients who were culture positive for this organism and from 30% of 46 patients who were culture negative but shown to have meningococcal meningitis by stain and detection of specific antigen in cerebrospinal fluid.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 1990
Accession Number
ADA249855

Entities

People

  • J. E. Sippel
  • N. I. Girgis

Organizations

  • Naval Medical Research Unit Three

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Albumins
  • Anti-Bacterial Agents
  • Anti-Infective Agents
  • Biomedical Research
  • Chemical Synthesis
  • Chemistry
  • Diseases And Disorders
  • Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections
  • Health Services
  • Infection
  • Intestinal Diseases
  • Mast Cells
  • Meningitis
  • Pathology
  • Wound Infections

Fields of Study

  • Biology
  • Medicine

Readers

  • Infectious Disease/Epidemiology
  • Microbial Pathology