Primary Article

Gram-Negative Bacillary Meningitis in the Adult Review of 39 Cases

Authors: DAVID J. GOWER MD, ALBERT A. BARROWS III MD, DAVID L. KELLY Jr. MD, SAMUEL PEGRAM Jr. MD

Abstract

ABSTRACTFrom 1976 through 1984, the period covered in this report, we reviewed our total experience with gram-negative meningitis in adult patients, looking especially at how treatment and mortality had changed. Thirty-nine adults had 45 episodes of gram-negative meningitis. Twenty-five patients had had a dura-arachnoid disruption, 12 a septic episode, and two a bacterial mastoiditis. The overall mortality was 35.9%. Thirteen patients were treated with a full course of intrathecal antibiotics (five or more days) and eight patients with an abbreviated course (one or two doses). The use of chloramphenicol was associated with poor patient outcome, a finding consistent with both experimental and clinical findings of others.

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