Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2019

The clinical characteristics of adult cryptococcal meningitis patients who died within one year of treatment with a focus on those with early mortality

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is a serious infectious disease of the central nervous system, and associated brain injuries can be found in the very early stage of disease. In this study, 92 adult CM patients (59 men, 33 women; median age 54.66\u202fyears, range 20-86\u202fyears) were enrolled, and their clinical, laboratory, neuroimaging features and therapeutic outcomes were analyzed. Two main clinical comparative analyses of the clinical characteristics and laboratory and neuroimaging features were made in this study. The first compared clinical differences between the survivors and non-survivors of all enrolled patients, and the second compared differences between the following three groups: Group I, the patients who died within 14\u202fdays of initiating treatment; Group II, the patients who died within 15\u202fdays to 1\u202fyear of initiating treatment, and Group III, the patients who survived for more than 1\u202fyear after initiating treatment. Prognostic factors including initial altered consciousness, increased cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactate level and the presence of cryptococcemia were significantly different between the different groups. The patients with early mortality had a higher CSF lactate level and higher rate of cryptococcemia. The presence of cryptococcemia was an important prognostic factor, and the patients with cryptococcemia had a higher incidence of positive CSF India ink stain. Further large-scale studies are needed to delineate the clinical and laboratory features of CM patients with early mortality.

Volume 67
Pages 80-84
DOI 10.1016/j.jocn.2019.06.015
Language English
Journal Journal of Clinical Neuroscience

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