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Etiologic Agents of Central Nervous System Infections among Febrile Hospitalized Patients in the Country of Georgia

OBJECTIVES: There is a large spectrum of viral, bacterial, fungal, and prion pathogens that cause central nervous system (CNS) infections. As such, identification of the etiological agent requires multiple laboratory tests and accurate diagnosis requires clinical and epidemiological information. Thi...

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Autores principales: Akhvlediani, Tamar, Bautista, Christian T., Shakarishvili, Roman, Tsertsvadze, Tengiz, Imnadze, Paata, Tatishvili, Nana, Davitashvili, Tamar, Samkharadze, Tamar, Chlikadze, Rusudan, Dvali, Natia, Dzigua, Lela, Karchava, Mariam, Gatserelia, Lana, Macharashvili, Nino, Kvirkvelia, Nana, Habashy, Engy Emil, Farrell, Margaret, Rowlinson, Emily, Sejvar, James, Hepburn, Matthew, Pimentel, Guillermo, Dueger, Erica, House, Brent, Rivard, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4219716/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25369023
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111393
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author Akhvlediani, Tamar
Bautista, Christian T.
Shakarishvili, Roman
Tsertsvadze, Tengiz
Imnadze, Paata
Tatishvili, Nana
Davitashvili, Tamar
Samkharadze, Tamar
Chlikadze, Rusudan
Dvali, Natia
Dzigua, Lela
Karchava, Mariam
Gatserelia, Lana
Macharashvili, Nino
Kvirkvelia, Nana
Habashy, Engy Emil
Farrell, Margaret
Rowlinson, Emily
Sejvar, James
Hepburn, Matthew
Pimentel, Guillermo
Dueger, Erica
House, Brent
Rivard, Robert
author_facet Akhvlediani, Tamar
Bautista, Christian T.
Shakarishvili, Roman
Tsertsvadze, Tengiz
Imnadze, Paata
Tatishvili, Nana
Davitashvili, Tamar
Samkharadze, Tamar
Chlikadze, Rusudan
Dvali, Natia
Dzigua, Lela
Karchava, Mariam
Gatserelia, Lana
Macharashvili, Nino
Kvirkvelia, Nana
Habashy, Engy Emil
Farrell, Margaret
Rowlinson, Emily
Sejvar, James
Hepburn, Matthew
Pimentel, Guillermo
Dueger, Erica
House, Brent
Rivard, Robert
author_sort Akhvlediani, Tamar
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: There is a large spectrum of viral, bacterial, fungal, and prion pathogens that cause central nervous system (CNS) infections. As such, identification of the etiological agent requires multiple laboratory tests and accurate diagnosis requires clinical and epidemiological information. This hospital-based study aimed to determine the main causes of acute meningitis and encephalitis and enhance laboratory capacity for CNS infection diagnosis. METHODS: Children and adults patients clinically diagnosed with meningitis or encephalitis were enrolled at four reference health centers. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was collected for bacterial culture, and in-house and multiplex RT-PCR testing was conducted for herpes simplex virus (HSV) types 1 and 2, mumps virus, enterovirus, varicella zoster virus (VZV), Streptococcus pneumoniae, HiB and Neisseria meningitidis. RESULTS: Out of 140 enrolled patients, the mean age was 23.9 years, and 58% were children. Bacterial or viral etiologies were determined in 51% of patients. Five Streptococcus pneumoniae cultures were isolated from CSF. Based on in-house PCR analysis, 25 patients were positive for S. pneumoniae, 6 for N. meningitidis, and 1 for H. influenzae. Viral multiplex PCR identified infections with enterovirus (n = 26), VZV (n = 4), and HSV-1 (n = 2). No patient was positive for mumps or HSV-2. CONCLUSIONS: Study findings indicate that S. pneumoniae and enteroviruses are the main etiologies in this patient cohort. The utility of molecular diagnostics for pathogen identification combined with the knowledge provided by the investigation may improve health outcomes of CNS infection cases in Georgia.
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spelling pubmed-42197162014-11-12 Etiologic Agents of Central Nervous System Infections among Febrile Hospitalized Patients in the Country of Georgia Akhvlediani, Tamar Bautista, Christian T. Shakarishvili, Roman Tsertsvadze, Tengiz Imnadze, Paata Tatishvili, Nana Davitashvili, Tamar Samkharadze, Tamar Chlikadze, Rusudan Dvali, Natia Dzigua, Lela Karchava, Mariam Gatserelia, Lana Macharashvili, Nino Kvirkvelia, Nana Habashy, Engy Emil Farrell, Margaret Rowlinson, Emily Sejvar, James Hepburn, Matthew Pimentel, Guillermo Dueger, Erica House, Brent Rivard, Robert PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVES: There is a large spectrum of viral, bacterial, fungal, and prion pathogens that cause central nervous system (CNS) infections. As such, identification of the etiological agent requires multiple laboratory tests and accurate diagnosis requires clinical and epidemiological information. This hospital-based study aimed to determine the main causes of acute meningitis and encephalitis and enhance laboratory capacity for CNS infection diagnosis. METHODS: Children and adults patients clinically diagnosed with meningitis or encephalitis were enrolled at four reference health centers. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was collected for bacterial culture, and in-house and multiplex RT-PCR testing was conducted for herpes simplex virus (HSV) types 1 and 2, mumps virus, enterovirus, varicella zoster virus (VZV), Streptococcus pneumoniae, HiB and Neisseria meningitidis. RESULTS: Out of 140 enrolled patients, the mean age was 23.9 years, and 58% were children. Bacterial or viral etiologies were determined in 51% of patients. Five Streptococcus pneumoniae cultures were isolated from CSF. Based on in-house PCR analysis, 25 patients were positive for S. pneumoniae, 6 for N. meningitidis, and 1 for H. influenzae. Viral multiplex PCR identified infections with enterovirus (n = 26), VZV (n = 4), and HSV-1 (n = 2). No patient was positive for mumps or HSV-2. CONCLUSIONS: Study findings indicate that S. pneumoniae and enteroviruses are the main etiologies in this patient cohort. The utility of molecular diagnostics for pathogen identification combined with the knowledge provided by the investigation may improve health outcomes of CNS infection cases in Georgia. Public Library of Science 2014-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4219716/ /pubmed/25369023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111393 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Akhvlediani, Tamar
Bautista, Christian T.
Shakarishvili, Roman
Tsertsvadze, Tengiz
Imnadze, Paata
Tatishvili, Nana
Davitashvili, Tamar
Samkharadze, Tamar
Chlikadze, Rusudan
Dvali, Natia
Dzigua, Lela
Karchava, Mariam
Gatserelia, Lana
Macharashvili, Nino
Kvirkvelia, Nana
Habashy, Engy Emil
Farrell, Margaret
Rowlinson, Emily
Sejvar, James
Hepburn, Matthew
Pimentel, Guillermo
Dueger, Erica
House, Brent
Rivard, Robert
Etiologic Agents of Central Nervous System Infections among Febrile Hospitalized Patients in the Country of Georgia
title Etiologic Agents of Central Nervous System Infections among Febrile Hospitalized Patients in the Country of Georgia
title_full Etiologic Agents of Central Nervous System Infections among Febrile Hospitalized Patients in the Country of Georgia
title_fullStr Etiologic Agents of Central Nervous System Infections among Febrile Hospitalized Patients in the Country of Georgia
title_full_unstemmed Etiologic Agents of Central Nervous System Infections among Febrile Hospitalized Patients in the Country of Georgia
title_short Etiologic Agents of Central Nervous System Infections among Febrile Hospitalized Patients in the Country of Georgia
title_sort etiologic agents of central nervous system infections among febrile hospitalized patients in the country of georgia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4219716/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25369023
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111393
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