LISTERIA MENINGITIS IN A CHILD WITH A HISTORY OF PICA

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Published: 2018-02-26

Page: 1-3


GEORGIA MURPHY *

Southport and Ormskirk Hospital NHS Trust, United Kingdom

SHYAM MARIGUDDI *

Department of Paediatric, Ormskirk District General Hospital, Wigan Rd., Ormskirk L39 2AZ, United Kingdom

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Introduction: Listeria monocytogenes is a potentially life threatening cause of bacterial meningitis which usually occurs in neonates, the elderly and immunocompromised patients. The pharmacological management is different to other strains of bacterial meningitis and therefore a suspicion and timely diagnosis are important to reduce risk of complications.

Case Presentation: We report a previously healthy 23 month old with a presentation of sepsis. The final diagnosis of listeria meningitis was not initially suspected due to her age. She did however have a history of eating soil.

Results: The patient recovered from meningitis once the bacterium was established after 3 weeks of intravenous amoxicillin treatment.

Conclusion: Further research into whether eating soil is a risk factor for listeria meningitis could improve guidelines for management and reduce the delay in prescribing the correct treatments.

Keywords: Listeria, meningitis, pica, paediatrics


How to Cite

MURPHY, GEORGIA, and SHYAM MARIGUDDI. 2018. “LISTERIA MENINGITIS IN A CHILD WITH A HISTORY OF PICA”. Journal of Case Reports in Medical Science 4 (1):1-3. https://ikprress.org/index.php/JOCRIMS/article/view/789.

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