Cochlear implantation after deafness from Pasteurella multocida meningitis.
Jeffrey Dewitt WarnerAshwini Milind TilakSudhir ManickavelErika WalshPublished in: BMJ case reports (2022)
A woman in her late 40s who works as a veterinary technician represented to the emergency department with increasing headache, confusion, neck stiffness, subjective fevers and distorted hearing 2 days after diagnosis of viral infection at an outside emergency department.Diagnosis of Pasteurella multocida was made from blood cultures and lumbar puncture. Intravenous ceftriaxone was administered for 21 days. By the time of resolution of acute meningitis, she had become completely deaf bilaterally. MRI revealed faint early ossification/possible labyrinthitis ossificans of the basal cochlea, which was confirmed on surgical exploration during the placement of cochlear implants bilaterally 42 days later. We discuss how the atypical features of this infection lead to diagnostic delay and high morbidity, the unique imaging/surgical findings resulting from the infection, and the clinical utility of early and bilateral cochlear implantation in this and similar cases.
Keyphrases
- emergency department
- cerebrospinal fluid
- liver failure
- high resolution
- hearing loss
- ultrasound guided
- magnetic resonance imaging
- minimally invasive
- respiratory failure
- contrast enhanced
- single cell
- adverse drug
- physical activity
- intensive care unit
- single molecule
- computed tomography
- sleep quality
- low dose
- depressive symptoms
- soft tissue