• 1 September 1982
    • journal article
    • abstracts
    • Vol. 42  (5) , 507-11
Abstract
The authors have recorded 15 cases in their eighteen months of hospital practice in Kinshasa. Fever and meningo-encephalitis are not specific symptoms and the detection of yeasts in the spinal fluid or sometimes in a lymph node is necessary to support the diagnosis. Direct examinations of the cerebro-spinal fluid is most often sufficient and easy for patients who have already had, in most cases, a long evolution giving way to an important proliferation of yeasts. Only one patient recovered by a treatment associating amphotericin B and ketoconazole. Another one, after an apparent recovery with the same treatment, died rapidly of acute tuberculosis.

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