View clinical trials related to Meningoencephalitis.
Filter by:Although tuberculosis is now considered a treatable disease, central nervous system tuberculosis (CNS-TB) when managed with the current standard-of-care (SOC), still has mortality rates ranging from 30-50% even in tertiary hospital centers. At present, the SOC for the management of CNS-TB is anti-tuberculous therapy with adjunctive corticosteroids. In CNS-TB, the activity of pathogenic host matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) is unopposed to tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs), resulting in a matrix-degrading phenotype which may drive worse outcomes in CNS-TB. In a prior established CNS-TB murine model, the investigators have demonstrated that adjunctive MMP inhibition using doxycycline, a widely available and cheap drug, in addition to standard TB treatment, compared with standard TB treatment alone, improved murine survival (Manuscript in preparation). The investigators previously showed that in humans with pulmonary TB, doxycycline with anti-TB treatment is safe, accelerates the resolution of inflammation, and suppresses systemic and respiratory MMPs. Hence, the investigators are now ideally positioned to determine if adjunctive doxycycline in patients with CNS-TB can improve clinical outcomes. The investigators will perform a Phase 2 double-blind randomized-controlled trial (RCT) of adjunctive doxycycline versus placebo with standard TB treatment and steroids for 8 weeks, with the primary outcome of 8-week mortality or severe neurological deficits.
Encephalitis and meningitis are serious central nervous system diseases. There is currently a lack of comprehensive and accurate diagnosis and treatment pathways. Therefore, we conducted this multicenter, prospective, and randomized controlled study. It was designed to evaluate the diagnostic performance and its impact on the outcomes of the patients enrolled. As such, we came to the results of the optimal process of diagnosis and treatment strategy of encephalitis/meningeal syndromes with improved effective treatments.
Neurocognitive impairment is frequently observed in pediatric patients with meningoencephalitis (ME) and sepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE) which represent two relevant central nervous system (CNS) diseases in pediatric patients. It is uncertain, if the the origin of the disease, located primarily in the CNS of patients with ME or secondarily in patients with SAE in the course of sepsis, is of importance for the severity of injury to the brain. Prospective clinical studies combining clinical and laboratory examinations including specific biomarkers of neuroaxonal injury were not performed in a comparative study. Biomarkers of neuroaxonal injury are therefore not only of great interest to detect and monitor neurocognitive impairment but also to quantify the severity of brain injury in patients with ME and SAE.
The investigator hypothesizes that oxidative stress responses to West Nile virus infection in the central nervous system determine the severity of infection and the long-term neurological, neuropsychological and functional sequelae of West Nile Neuroinvasive Disease.
The DREAMM project is investigating whether the DREAMM interventions (1) Health system strengthening, 2) Co-designed education programs tailored to frontline healthcare workers, 3) Implementation of a diagnostic and treatment algorithm and, 4) Communities of practice in infectious diseases and laboratory capacity building) when combined reduce two week all-cause mortality of HIV-associated meningo-encephalitis in African LMICs.
The purpose of this study is to develop initial efficacy, feasibility, and safety data regarding the use of Tamoxifen in combination with amphotericin B and fluconazole in the treatment of cryptococcal meningitis. The results of the study will inform the design and feasibility of a larger study powered to a survival endpoint. The study hypothesis is that adding tamoxifen to standard antifungal therapy increases the rate of clearance of yeast from cerebrospinal fluid. Increased rates of clearance of yeast from cerebrospinal fluid have previously been associated with improved clinical outcomes, including survival and disability.
The primary purpose of this study is to assess the contribution of a non-invasive sampling (pharyngeal swab) in the diagnosis of community based meningitis or meningo-encephalitis.
Of all emergency room patients, persons presenting with encephalitis/meningitis syndrome of a potentially infectious nature are among those of greatest concern. Routine clinical and laboratory evaluation of such patients involves screening for known infectious disease agents, selection of which is nonstandardized. Progress in diagnostic technologies, especially molecular techniques based on genetic characteristics of potential pathogens, has greatly expanded the investigators capacity to evaluate specimens from patients for a much wider range of potential pathogens (bacterial, viral, fungal and parasitic agents). Use of Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology offers the possibility of identifying causative agents for the approximately 50% of all such presentations which go un-diagnosed. The investigators propose a study involving a collaboration between the EMERGEncy ID NET, a network of 10 geographically diverse university-affiliated urban emergency departments (coordinated by Olive View-UCLA Medical Center) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), to use these new technologies to address this issue.