24- Meningitis Flashcards

1
Q

cytokines involved in meningitis

A

IL1 IL6 TNF

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2
Q

non infectious causes of meningitis

A

medications, autoimmune dxs, vasculitis, malignant tumors

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3
Q

meningitis is an infection and inflammation of

A

the CSF in the subarachnoid space and ventricular spaces that involved the adjacent meninges, transversing vessels and brain structures

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4
Q

encephalitis is defined as

A

inflammation of brain parenchyma

CSF: has fewer WBC

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5
Q

etiology of newborne meningitis

A

E coli, group B streptococcus (S agalactiae)

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6
Q

Community acquired etiology of meningitis

A
S. aureus
Coagulase negative staphylococci
S. pneumonia
N. meningitidis
H. influenza
L. monocytogenes
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7
Q

etiology of meningitis in old people >50

A

S pneumonia

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8
Q

transmission steps for meningococcal meningitis

A
nasal colonization
extension to upper resp tract
local invasion into the blood stream
invasion of meningeal space
replication in the meningeal space
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9
Q

symptoms of bacterial meningitis (tetrad)

A

fever, headache, nuchal rigidity, altered mental status

  • pts with meningococcal infection often develop a petechial rash
  • kernig sign: severe stiffness of the hamstrings, so an inability to straighten the leg when hip is flexed 90
  • brudzinski sign: severe neck stiffness causes hips and knees to flex when the neck is flexed
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10
Q

contraindications for lumbar puncture

A
  • intracranial pressure is high with risk for cerebral herniation due to obstructive hydrocephalus, cerebral edema, space occupying lesion
  • thrombocytopenia
  • spinal epidural abscess
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11
Q

when should a CT be done before lumbar puncture in meningitis

A
  • immunocompromised
  • history of CNS dx
  • new onset seizure
  • papilledema
  • abnormal levels of consciousness
  • focal neurologic deficit
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12
Q

gram pos diplococci suggest

A

pneumococcal infection

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13
Q

gram neg diplococci suggest

A

meningococcal infection

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14
Q

small pleomorphic gram negative coccobacilli suggest

A

H influenza infection

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15
Q

gram pos rods suggest

A

listeria

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16
Q

empirical tx for meningitis

A

ceftriaxone, ampicillin

17
Q

HA meningitis tx

A

meropenem, vancomycin

18
Q

dexamethosone in meningitis

A

is adjunctive therapy, and not known to be entirely effective

19
Q

who should be targeted by chemoprophylaxis of meningitis

A
close contacts  (household, day care, direct exposure) in 7 days before diagnosis
in case of N meningitidis, and H influenza
- use ciprofloxacine, rifampicin, ceftriaxone
20
Q

nosocomial etiology of meningitis

A

proprionibacterium, and gram neg rods

21
Q

what does a latex agglutination test do

A

detects antigens of common meningococcal infections