%0 Case Reports %T Emerging Meningococcal B Meningitis in Japan: A Case Report of a 50-Year-Old Japanese Man with Diabetes. %A Ishikawa K %A Takahashi H %A Akeda Y %A Mori N %J Am J Case Rep %V 25 %N 0 %D 2024 Jul 16 %M 39011557 暂无%R 10.12659/AJCR.943973 %X BACKGROUND Meningococcal meningitis is rare in Japan; however, when outbreaks do occur, they predominantly involve domestically infected cases rather than those contracted overseas. CASE REPORT A Japanese man with diabetes in his 50s experienced fever and loss of consciousness, with no history of international travel. In our hospital, gram-negative diplococci were detected in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of the patient by Gram staining, although the rapid agglutination test and cultures of blood and CSF were negative. Multiplex polymerase-chain reaction (PCR) testing returned positive results for meningococcus and parechovirus. Brain MRI revealed a finding of meningitis, but there were no indications of encephalitis. To determine the serotype and genotype, we sent the sample to the National Institute of Infectious Diseases, which identified the serogroup and sequence type (ST) as type B and 2057, respectively. Despite the unknown antimicrobial susceptibility, the patient responded well to empirical treatment with ceftriaxone at 2 g every 12 h, and was discharged with remaining symptoms of dizziness, headache, difficulty hearing in the left ear, and tinnitus in the left ear. CONCLUSIONS In Japan, vaccines covering serogroups A, C, and W/Y are available but not routinely administered. According to epidemiological surveillance reports, serogroup B is the second most common cause of meningococcal meningitis in Japan, yet there is no corresponding vaccine available in the country. This case has prompted a review of the epidemiology of meningococcus in Japan, encompassing strategies for vaccination and hospital infection control to prevent droplet transmission, which includes post-exposure prophylaxis when no prior measures have been implemented.