View clinical trials related to Brain Abscess.
Filter by:Allotransplantation is the process of transferring organ(s), tissue(s) or cell(s) from a healthy donor to a recipient. The two main applications of allotransplantation are solid organ transplantation and allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. For several reasons, including the need to use immunosuppressive drugs after transplantation, recipients of allografts carry a high risk of infectious complications. Central nervous system infections are dreadful complications of transplantation, which can be divided into brain abscesses, meningitis, and encephalitis. In particular, brain abscesses pose major diagnostic and therapeutic challenges to transplant physicians, and are frequently fatal in transplant recipients. As compared with immunocompetent patients, transplant recipients and other immunocompromised patients have an increased risk of brain abscesses due to opportunistic pathogens, including fungi, parasites, bacteria, and mycobacteria. Determining the epidemiology of brain abscesses is critical to guide transplant teams regarding the diagnosis and management of brain abscesses in transplant recipients. Because the incidence of brain abscesses is low after transplantation, transplant teams often have limited clinical experience in the management of these infections. Similarly, most publications focusing on post-transplant brain abscesses are either case reports, small case series, or review articles. We therefore aim to conduct a multicentre retrospective study on the epidemiology, the characteristics, and the outcome of brain abscesses in transplant recipients in the era of new diagnostic tools and progress in prophylaxis.
Establish the repertoire of bacteria and Archaea responsible for brain abscesses. Correlate the microbial repertoire to epidemiological, clinical and radiological data; to define the different nosological entities falling within the framework of cerebral abscesses.