The Pediatric infectious disease journal
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Pediatr. Infect. Dis. J. · Dec 1989
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialDexamethasone treatment for bacterial meningitis in children and adults.
Four hundred twenty-nine patients with bacterial meningitis were assigned on a nonselective alternating basis into one of two therapeutic regimens. Patients in Group I received dexamethasone in addition to standard antibacterial chemotherapy of ampicillin and chloramphenicol whereas those in Group II received antibacterial chemotherapy alone. Dexamethasone was given intramuscularly (8 mg to children younger than 12 years and 12 mg to adults every 12 hours for 3 days). ⋯ A reduction in the overall neurologic sequelae (hearing impairment and paresis) was observed in patients receiving dexamethasone. This reduction was significant only in patients with Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis; none of the 45 surviving patients receiving steroids had hearing loss whereas 4 of 32 patients not receiving dexamethasone had severe hearing loss (P less than 0.05). No significant difference was observed between the two groups with regard to time for patients to become afebrile or to regain consciousness or in the mean admission and 24- to 36-hour cerebrospinal fluid leukocyte count, glucose or protein content.
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Pediatr. Infect. Dis. J. · Nov 1989
Comparative StudyAnatomic and audiologic sequelae after tympanostomy tube insertion or prolonged antibiotic therapy for otitis media.
In this study the anatomic and hearing sequelae are characterized for 43 children (86 ears) with recurrent acute otitis media and/or persistent otitis media with effusion who had received three or more tympanostomy tube placements and 46 children (92 ears) managed medically with repeated courses of therapeutic and/or or prophylactic antibiotics. In the surgical group 311 tympanostomy tube surgeries had been performed and in the medical group 1334 episodes of acute otitis media and/or 186 episodes of otitis media with effusion occurred. Tympanosclerosis was found in 6.5% of the medical group ears and 52.3% of the surgical group ears. ⋯ Abnormal hearing, defined as a hearing threshold greater than 20 dB occurred in 9.3 to 18.7% of the surgical ears and in 3.7 to 9.0% of the medical ears depending on the hearing frequency tested. Medical management consisting of recurrent use of therapeutic and/or prophylactic antibiotics was associated with infrequent anatomic and audiologic sequelae. Repeated placement of tympanostomy tubes may be associated with the frequent occurrence of both anatomic and audiologic sequelae.
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Pediatr. Infect. Dis. J. · Nov 1989
Historical ArticleDiagnosis of streptococcal pharyngitis: an introduction.