Diplomate American Board of Internal Medicine

Diplomate American Board of Internal Medicine

<p>Meningitis Encephalitis Dr.Nusrum Iqbal Diplomate American Board of Internal Medicine Meningitis • Inflammation of the meninges • Micro-organism reach the the meninges – Direct extension (from the ears, nasopharynx, cranial injury) – Blood stream</p><p>Immunocompromised patients (HIV and those taking cytotoxic drugs) are at increased risk of meningeal infection by unusual organisms</p><p>Causes • Bacteria • Viruses • Fungi • Other organisms • Malignant cells • Drugs and contrast media • Blood following SAH Bacteria • Neiseria meningitidis • streptococcus pneumoniae • staphylococcus aureus • listeria moncytogenes • gram-negative tuberculosis • treponema pallidum Viruses • Enteroviruses – Echo – coxsackie – polio • Mumps • herpes simplex • HIV • epstein-Barr virus Fungi • Cryptococcus neoformans • candida Pathology • In acute bacterial meningitis, the pia-archnoid is congested with polymorphs. A layer of pus forms that may organize to form adhesions, causing cranial nerve palsies and hydrocephalus • In chronic infection (e.g. TB), the brain is covered in a viscous greyish green exudate with numerous meningeal tubercles. Pathology • Adhesions are typically seen. Cerebral edema is common in any bacterial meningitis • In viral meningitis there is a predominantly lymphocytic inflammatory reaction in the CSF without pus formation or adhesion Clinical Features • The meningitic syndrome – headache – neck stiffness and fever – photophobia – vomiting • Specific varieties of meningitis – features readily visible on examination Acute bacterial meningitis • Onset is typically sudden, with rigors and a high fever • petechial rash, is strong evidence of meningococcal meninigitis • septicemia may present with acute septicemic shock • haemophilus influenzae type b infection has been virtually eliminated in developed countries by immunization Viral meningitis • Almost always a benign, self limiting condition lasting 4-10 days • headache may follow for some weeks there are no serious sequelae Chronic meningitis • Tuberculosis or cryptococcal meningitis commences with vague headache, anorexia and vomiting • meninigitic signs may take some weeks to develop • drowsiness, focal signs and seizures are common • syphilis, sarcoidosis and Behcet’s syndrome can also cause chronic meningits. In some cases a cause is never found Malignant meningitis • Malignant cells can cause a subacute or chronic non-infective meninigitic process • cranial nerve palsies, paraparesis and root lesions are seen, often in complex and fluctuating patterns • CSF cell count is raised, with high protein and low glucoses. • Treatment is with intrathecal cytotoxic agents, but the prognosis is poor Differential Diagnosis • Subarachnoid hemorrhage • Migraine • Acute meningitis • Intracranial mass lesion • Cerebral malaria Management • Ther recognition and immediate treatment of acute bacterial meningitis is vital • Condition is lethal, and even with optimal care the mortality is around 15% • Immediate parenteral antibiotic treatment should be given before any investigation • Combination of 3rd generation cephalosporin along with vancomycin for community acquired Meningitis • lumbar puncture is usually contraindicated if the clinical diagnosis is meningococcal disease Management • If there is any suspicion of an intracranial mass lesion, an immediate CT scan should be carried out • Immediate lumbar puncture should follow, if this is deemed safe • Blood should be taken for cultures and glucose level as well as for routine tests Management • Distinguish between viral, pyogenic, tuberculous and other organisms from the clinical setting and immediate examination of the CSF • In bacterial meningitis in children, dexamethasone is also given as this reduces the frequency of complications, particularly deafness Management • Tuberculous meningitis is treated for at least nine months with antituberculous drugs; rifampicin, isoniazid and pyrazinamide • local infection (e.g. an infected paranasal sinus) should be treated, surgically if necessary • surgical repair of depressed skull fracture or meningeal tear may be required Prophylaxis • Meningococcal infection condition should be notified to local public health authorities • prophylaxis of contacts with rifampicin • a vaccine is available against serogroup A and C meningococci Encephalitis • Encephalitis is inflammation of brain parenchyma • word usually implies viral infection by a wide variety of viruses Acute viral encephalitis • In many cases a viral etiology is persumed but not confirmed serologically or by culture • Usual organisms cultured from cases of viral encephalitis in adults are herpes simplex, Echo, Coxackie, mumps, Epstein-Barr viruses • Rabies is also variety of viral encephalitis Acute viral encephalitis • Japanese encephalitis in SE Asia • Rose River fever in Australia • California encephalitis in the USA • Omsk hemorrhagic fever in Russia • Tick-borne flavivirus encephalitis in Sweden and Central Europe Clinical Features • Many of these infections cause a mild self-limiting illness • fever • headache • mood change • drowsiness develop over several hours to several days • focal signs • seizures • coma • Death Differential Diagnosis • Bacterial meningitis with cerebral oedema and/or cerebral venous thrombosis • cerebral abscess • acute diseminated encephalomyelitis • cerebral malaria • toxic confusional states in febrile illnesses and in septicaemia Investigations • CT and MR imaging show diffuse areas of edema, often in the temporal lobes • ECG shows characteristic slow-wave changes • The CSF shows cells typical of a viral etiology • specific viral blood and CSF serology is helpful Treatment • Suspected herpes simplex encephalitis is immediately treated with intravenous acyclovir • supportive measures are required for comatose patients • seizures are treated with anticonvulsants • prophylactic immunization is possible against Japanese encephalitis and sometimes advised for travellers to endemic areas in South East Asia</p>

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    5 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us