News Release

Researchers identify early warning signs for meningococcal disease in children

EMBARGO: 00:01H (London time) Wednesday January 11, 2006. In North America the embargo lifts at 18:30H ET Tuesday January 10, 2006.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

The Lancet_DELETED

Researchers have identified a number of early symptoms for meningococcal disease in children that could substantially speed up diagnosis, reporting their findings online in The Lancet today (Wednesday January 11, 2005).

Meningococcal disease is the most common infectious cause of death in children in many developed countries. The disease can progress from initial symptoms to death within hours, so early diagnosis is crucial. However, the classic symptoms of the disease – rash, headache, stiff neck, sensitivity to light, and impaired consciousness – occur late in the pre-hospital illness and currently parents and doctors are over-reliant on these for diagnosis.

To investigate the early clinical features of the disease, Matthew Thompson (University of Oxford, UK) and colleagues sent questionnaires to parents of 448 children with meningococcal disease. They also looked at the children's medical records. They found that the classic symptoms of the disease developed late, with an average onset of 13-22 hours. By contrast, 72% of the children had early symptoms of infection (sepsis) – leg pain, cold hands and feet, and abnormal skin colour - that developed at an average of 8 hours. These early clinical features should be promoted to parents and doctors to substantially speed up diagnosis of this potentially fatal infection in children, state the authors.

Dr Thompson states: "Recognising early symptoms of sepsis [infection] could increase the proportion of children identified by primary-care physicians and shorten the time to hospital admission. The framework within which meningococcal disease is diagnosed should be changed to emphasise identification of these early symptoms by parents and clinicians."

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See also accompanying Comment.

Contact: Matthew Thompson, Department of Primary Health Care, Old Road Campus, University of Oxford, Headington, Oxford, OX3 7LF, UK. T) 44-186-522-6750, matthew.thompson@dphpc.ox.ac.uk


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