Abstract

A total of 522 children, aged 1 month to 6 years, who presented with convulsions and fever of acute onset at the Children's Emergency Room of the University of Benin Teaching Hospital over a 1-year period, were prospectively evaluated. Bacterial meningitis was diagnosed in 22 (4.2%) on bacteriological and/or biochemical evidence. The causative organisms were cultured from the CSF in 13 (Neisseria meningitidis = 7, Streptococcus pneumoniae = 5 and Haemophilus influenzae = 1) and identified by Gram stain only in three (Gram-positive diplococci = 2 and Gram-negative diplococci = 1). No organisms were identified in the CSF of six of the children with meningitis. The prevalence of meningitis declined sharply after 6 months of age. Six of the children with bacterial meningitis lacked classical meningeal signs but had other indications for lumbar puncture. The following were significantly associated with meningitis: age under 6 months; focal or multiple seizures; absence of a past or family history of seizures; unrousable coma; and an extracranial focus of infection. It is concluded that bacterial meningitis occurs in a good proportion of children, even beyond infancy, with convulsions associated with fever of acute onset, and that decision on the need for lumbar puncture should be guided by clinical features such as age and the presence of complex febrile seizures.

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