We carried out a prospective observational study on clinical features of bacterial meningitis. Between October 2002 and June 2005, 322 adult bacterial meningitis cases in 49 infectious disease wards in Italy (MENTORE study group) were enrolled in the study. 133 cases were due to Streptococcus pneumoniae, 44 to Neisseria meningitidis and 145 to other microorganisms. A high SAPS score and coma on admission, as well as need for mechanical ventilation, were more frequent in the pneumococcal meningitis group. Neurological impairment was present in 151 out of 311 patients, and was more frequent in pneumococcal meningitis. A single antibiotic was employed in only 90 of 315 cases; a combination of ceftriaxone and ampicillin was the most frequently administered treatment. Ceftriaxone was also the single most used drug. Adjunctive treatment with steroids was administered in 210 out of 303 patients for a median duration of 7 days. Median duration of fever was 4 days, and median hospital stay was 16 days; hospitalization was significantly longer in the pneumococcal meningitis group. At discharge, neurological impairment was still present in 59 (21%) of 277 patients. Twenty (6.9%) out of 289 patients died during hospitalization. Distribution of adverse outcome (death and neurological impairment) in patients treated with or without steroids and within different time zones between onset of symptoms and commencement of antibiotics was studied; a trend toward a worse prognosis was seen in patients treated more than 24 hours after onset of the disease.In our study, infectious disease clinicians made extensive use of steroids as adjuvant therapy for bacterial meningitis, even in absence of detailed national and local guidelines. Mortality seemed to be lower in comparison with the literature.
A 46-year-old woman was admitted to our department with symptoms of nausea, anorexia and asthenia. Serum alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase levels were increased; all serological tests for viral hepatitis and autoimmune disorders were negative. She had taken Lycopodium similiaplex solution as sedative for the previous 8 weeks, whose two constituents, Lycopodium serratum and Chelidonium majus, are found to be potentially toxic. After discontinuing L. similiaplex use, liver values returned to normal and she was asymptomatic. The diagnosis was definitively confirmed by liver biopsy; on the basis of the histological specimen, a hypersensitivity reaction was hypothesized as a possible pathogenic mechanism. Hepatotoxicity of phytotherapy has already been described, although so far, the true incidence and the pathogenic mechanisms are largely unknown. It is important to increase awareness of both clinicians and patients about the potential dangers of herbal remedies; surveillance systems and quality control of these products are necessary.
This chapter reviews Italy's response to its HIV epidemic. More than twenty years after the diagnosis of the first case of AIDS, the pattern of the HIV epidemic in Italy has significantly changed. A particular feature of the Italian case is that heterosexual transmission has been increasing, mainly as a result of sexual contact with injecting drug users (IDUs). This reflects the fact that, despite a number of local success stories, Italy has not been successful in preventing the spread of HIV infection both among and from IDUs.
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