View clinical trials related to Tuberculosis, Meningeal.
Filter by:Tuberculous meningitis (TBM) is the most lethal form of extra pulmonary tuberculosis. This devastating disease kills almost a third of its sufferers and disables a significant proportion of the survivors. TBM poses one of the most difficult diagnostic and therapeutic challenges in modern clinical practice. High-quality robust clinical trials have made a considerable contribution to the treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis in the last four decades. However, evidence from such clinical trials is lacking in TBM and the treatment remains uncertain. There is a significant variation in the choice, dose and duration of drugs between countries, institutions and clinicians. Investigators propose a multi-centric open-label clinical trial to assess the efficacy of short-course anti-TB drugs with high dose rifampicin, and moxifloxacin along with conventional anti-TB drugs and adjuvant therapy with aspirin and corticosteroids. Controls will receive standard treatment as per national guidelines for TBM. The investigators also aim to assess the safety and tolerability of high-dose Rifampicin and Moxifloxacin and the Pharmacodynamics and Pharmacokinetics parameters of ATT (Rifampicin, INH, Moxifloxacin and Pyrazinamide) in CSF between the two groups
Tubercular meningitis occurs in around 10% of those with extrapulmonary tuberculosis and is a major cause of mortality and morbidity. Inspite of effective Anti-tubercular drugs, still around 30% of patients develop complications due to arachnoiditis such as spinal tubercular radiculomyelitis, optico-chiasmatic arachnoiditis, development of new tuberculomas after starting therapy etc. which are probably immune mediated inflammatory responses due to paradoxical reaction to ATT. The management of arachnoiditis is far from satisfactory. High dose methylprednisolone, intrathecal hyaluronic acid, thalidomide have been tried in small case series and case reports. However, the results have not been satisfactory. There are two published reports of cyclophosphamide usage in TBM related vasculitis and stroke The investigators tried cyclophosphamide in four patients after consent, and found remarkable improvement in all of them. (Under peer review) In order to test this hypothesis, a randomized controlled trial is needed.
The study aimed to evaluate the relationships between the gene polymorphisms of leukotriene A4 hydrolase(LTA4H) and Dexamethasone treatment for tuberculous meningitis in Chinese patients.