Meningitis Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Meningitis, including details on viral, bacterial, spinal, symptoms, treatment. | ||||||||
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Threshold shift: effects of cochlear implantation on the risk of pneumococcal meningitis.Wei BP, Shepherd RK, Robins-Browne RM, Clark GM, O'Leary SJ Bionic Ear Institute, the University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. bwei@bionicear.org OBJECTIVES: The study goals were to examine whether cochlear implantation increases the risk of meningitis in the absence of other risk factors and to understand the pathogenesis of pneumococcal meningitis post cochlear implantation. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Four weeks following surgery, 54 rats (18 of which received a cochleostomy alone, 18 of which received a cochleostomy and acute cochlear implantation using standard surgical techniques, and 18 of which received a cochlear implant) were infected with Streptococcus pneumoniae via three different routes of bacterial inoculation (middle ear, inner ear, and intraperitoneal) to represent all potential routes of bacterial infection from the upper respiratory tract to the meninges. RESULTS: The presence of a cochlear implant reduced the threshold of bacteria required to cause pneumococcal meningitis from all routes of infection in healthy animals. CONCLUSION: The presence of a cochlear implant increases the risk of pneumococcal meningitis regardless of the route of bacterial infection. SIGNIFICANCE: Early detection and treatment of pneumococcal infection such as otitis media may be required, as cochlear implantation may lead to a reduction of infectious threshold for meningitis. Published 9 April 2007 in Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg, 136(4): 589-96.
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