Krishnan Chakkiyar, P R Sabeel Abdulla, M D Fiji, M S Vinod Kumar, M P Jayakrishnan
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Factors contributing to the non-identification of bacterial meningitis in febrile infants: A case series study.
Non-identification of serious bacterial infection (SBI) in febrile infants is a common occurrence in clinical practice, culminating in catastrophic presentations. Six infants who initially presented to the clinician with fever without a focus, and were lately diagnosed with bacterial meningitis were analyzed for clinician-related factors contributing to the non-identification of meningitis. In a febrile neonate and a febrile young infant, lack of comprehensive evaluation was contributing to the non-identification of SBI; in four infants above the age of 3 months, meningitis was missed in spite of clinicians practicing treatment guidelines. Inadequate symptom characterization in two febrile infants and inappropriate interpretation of hemogram in three febrile infants also contributed to the non-identification of meningitis. Except for one, all infants developed complications. We conclude that the characterization of clinical features of SBI-like meningitis, interpretation of lab data, and adherence to the treatment guidelines are crucial in the management of an infant presenting as fever without a focus.
期刊介绍:
SAGE Open Medical Case Reports (indexed in PubMed Central) is a peer reviewed, open access journal. It aims to provide a publication home for short case reports and case series, which often do not find a place in traditional primary research journals, but provide key insights into real medical cases that are essential for physicians, and may ultimately help to improve patient outcomes. SAGE Open Medical Case Reports does not limit content due to page budgets or thematic significance. Papers are subject to rigorous peer review and are selected on the basis of whether the research is sound and deserves publication. By virtue of not restricting papers to a narrow discipline, SAGE Open Medical Case Reports facilitates the discovery of the connections between papers, whether within or between disciplines. Case reports can span the full spectrum of medicine across the health sciences in the broadest sense, including: Allergy/Immunology Anaesthesia/Pain Cardiovascular Critical Care/ Emergency Medicine Dentistry Dermatology Diabetes/Endocrinology Epidemiology/Public Health Gastroenterology/Hepatology Geriatrics/Gerontology Haematology Infectious Diseases Mental Health/Psychiatry Nephrology Neurology Nursing Obstetrics/Gynaecology Oncology Ophthalmology Orthopaedics/Rehabilitation/Occupational Therapy Otolaryngology Palliative Medicine Pathology Pharmacoeconomics/health economics Pharmacoepidemiology/Drug safety Psychopharmacology Radiology Respiratory Medicine Rheumatology/ Clinical Immunology Sports Medicine Surgery Toxicology Urology Women''s Health.