Meningitis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of meningitis?

A

Inflammation of the meninges of the brain

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2
Q

What are the 3 types of meningitis?

A

Bacterial, Viral, Tuberculous

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3
Q

What are causative agents of meningitis?

A

Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria, Group B strep., e. coli, listeria

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4
Q

What type of transmittable disease is meningitis?

A

Droplet

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5
Q

What type can the baby be infected from from the mother?

A

Group B.

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6
Q

How does bacterial meningitis start?

A

As an upper respiratory infection, then initiates swelling of meninges

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7
Q

What is the incidence of meningitis?

A

Can occur at any time- flu is in the autumn/winter, pneumococcal and meningicoccal late winter and spring

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8
Q

What is the pathophysilogy of bacterial meningitis?

A

Starts as inflammation, then exudation, then white blood cells are accumulated and tissue damage can occur– the brain becomes hyperemic and edematous

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9
Q

Where does the purulent exudate extend to?

A

The 4 ventricles

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10
Q

What does the thick pus, fibrin and adhesions obstruct?

A

The flow of CSF through the aqueduct of Sylvius

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11
Q

What does the aqueduct of sylvius do?

A

connects the midline ventricles

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12
Q

What are classic symptoms of meningitis?

A

Severe headache, dislike bright lights, fever, projectile vomitting, stiff neck, rapid breathing, drowsy, stomach, joint, muscle pains, rash

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13
Q

What are early signs of meningitis?

A

Pale, blue, dusky skin around lips, severe leg pain, cold hands or feet, high temperature

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14
Q

What are clinical manifestations in infants and young children of bacterial meningitis?

A

fever, vomitting, poor feeding, irritability, seizures, buldging fontanels, stiff neck, rash

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15
Q

What are clinical manifestations in older children and teens of bacterial meningitis?

A

fever, chills, severe headache, vomitting, stiff neck, Kernigs and Brudzinski’s signs, rash, photophobia, seizures

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16
Q

What is Kernig’s Sign?

A

Positive sign means they cannot straighten their leg because of how stiff the hamstring is

17
Q

What is Brudzinski’s Sign?

A

Positive is when the neck is stiff and they have to flex their knees and hips to flex their neck

18
Q

How is bacterial meningitis diagnosed?

A

By Lumbar puncture, sometimes blood and nasal cultures

19
Q

Nursing responsibilities for lumbar puncture

A

Keep back curved, keep child still, lay them on their side or sit upright, keep the field sterile- then comfort them after, teach parents about the procedure before

20
Q

What type of isolation is the child on?

A

Respiratory- droplet and contact procautions

21
Q

What are some therapeutic management techniques?

A

maintain hydration and ventilation, reduce ICP, manage shock, control seizures and temperature, correct anemia

22
Q

What is a normal ICP?

A

5-15mmHG

23
Q

What types of drugs would be used to treat bacterial meningitis?

A

Antibiotics- 10 days, rocephin, cefotaxine, vancomycin
Steroids- Dexamethosone
Headache- Acetaminophen
Antipyretics- Hydrate and acetaminophen

24
Q

Bacterial meningitis treatment in the hospital

A

Maintain ventilation, monitor respiratory status, keep room quiet, dark, no noise, control seizures, administer meds- AVOID NARCOTICS, neuro assessment, strick I&O, measure head circumference

25
Q

What are some complications of bacterial meningitis?

A

hydrocephalus, subdural effusion, thrombosis in meningeal veins, brain abscess, deafness, blindness, weakness, paralysis of face/neck

26
Q

What is SIADH?

A

Hyponatremia and excessive release of the antidiuretic hormone– make the brain retain fluid, needa hypertonic solution and loop diuretic

27
Q

What are signs and symptoms of SIADH?

A

Water retention, lethargy, coma, seizures, nausea, vomitting, electrolyte imbalance, edema

28
Q

What is waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome?

A

Sudden, rapid, severe onset of overwhelming septic shock, causes DIC and massive bilateral adrenal hemorrhage and purpura (usually with Nisseria)

29
Q

What is DIC?

A

Deceminated Intravascular Cementation- the blood is unable to clot- treat with heparin to stop the cascade

30
Q

What are some residual effects of complications related to bacterial meningtis?

A

Seizure disorders, hearing loss, vision loss, mental retardation, cognitive delays, may need a ventricular peritoneal shunt

31
Q

How do you prevent bacterial meningitis?

A

Treat infections immediately, keep up with immunizations, rifampin to those exposed

32
Q

What is viral meningitis?

A

Inflammation of the meninges associated with past exposure to measles, mumps, herpes, leukemia, and enteroviruses

33
Q

What is the pathophysiology of viral meningitis?

A

Caused by enteroviruses from sputum, saliva, or mucousa with spontaneous subsiding of symptoms with no residual effects

34
Q

Clinical manifestations of viral meningitis

A

Same as bacterial, different kind of rash

35
Q

How do you diagnose viral meningitis?

A

Lumbar puncture- differentiates between bacterial and viral- negative bacterial culture

36
Q

How do you treat viral meningitis?

A

Treat symptoms- self limiting disease. Decrease stimulu, control fever, hydrate, antibiotics until viral is confirmed