The American journal of emergency medicine
-
Letter Case Reports
Which out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients should be thrombolysed?
-
A 74-year-old man noted dysarthria and right hemiparesis. His history included a gastric ulcer 2 years previously, and he had gradually lost 10 kg over a 2-year period due to appetite loss. He daily consumed 120 mg of alcohol. ⋯ Head magnetic resonance image (MRI; diffusion weighted image) disclosed 3 spotty, high-intensity signals in the brain. The main results of biochemical analyses of the blood collected on arrival were as follows: hemoglobin, 5.5 g/dL; glucose, 5 mg/dL; aspartate aminotransferase, 89 IU/L. He was admitted for further examination and was diagnosed as having alcoholic ketoacidosis with hypoglycemic encephalopathy and anemia due to colon cancer.
-
Pleocytosis of the cerebrospinal fluid is a key finding for the diagnosis of bacterial meningitis. Bacterial meningitis presenting in normal cerebrospinal fluid is rare in adult patients. We describe the case of a patient with pneumococcal meningitis without cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis. This case suggests that immediate antibiotic therapy should be started when meningitis is suspected, even with normal cerebrospinal fluid findings. (See Figure.)