Group-Y Meningococcal Disease

Twelve Cases at an Army Training Center

  1. JERRY D. SMILACK, M.D.
  1. Houston, Texas

    Abstract

    Meningococcal infections have been a serious cause of morbidity and mortality in the military. Although the recent availability of an effective polysaccharide vaccine against group-C infection has resulted in a marked diminution of disease, group-Y meningococcal infections have continued, with an occasional isolated epidemic. Experience with 12 cases of group-Y disease at one U.S. Army training center is presented. Nearly half of the patients presented primarily with evidence of central nervous system involvement. In 4 of the 12 cases meningococcemia alone was the initial presentation; one additional patient with meningococcemia developed meningoencephalitis shortly after hospital admission. There were two cases of primary meningococcal pneumonia. Three of the patients with meningococcemia died; two had clinical or autopsy evidence of a syndrome of disseminated intravascular coagulation. Group-Y meningococcal disease appears to be a virulent infection with a significant mortality rate.

    Article and Author Information

    • ▸From U.S. Walson Army Hospital, Fort Dix, New Jersey.

    • ▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Jerry D. Smilack, M.D., Infectious Disease Laboratory, The Methodist Hospital, 6516 Bertner Blvd., Houston, TX 77025.

      • Received May 22, 1974.
      • Accepted September 3, 1974.
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