Meningitis Flashcards

1
Q

Meningitis Definition

A

inflammation of the meninges, defined by an abnormal number of WBC in the cerebrospinal fluid

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2
Q

Acute

A
  • onset within hours to day.

- viruses, bacteria

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3
Q

Chronic

A
  • onset within weeks to months

- spirochetes, mycobacteria, fungi

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4
Q

Epiemiology

A

Viruses:
-most prevalent about 30,000-75,000 cases/year in US
-most are enteroviruses (resolves spontaneously with or without specific treatment)
-usually a self-limited disease
Bacteria:
-approximately 4000 cases and 500 deaths per year in US
-higher incidence and mortality in the developing world

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5
Q

Stretococcus Pneumoniae Meningitis

A
  • most common etiologic agent in US (58% of cases)
  • mortality of 16-26%
  • associated with other suppurative foci of infection:
  • pneumonia (25%)
  • otitis media or mastoiditis (30%)
  • sinusitis (10-15%)
  • endocarditis (<5%)
  • head trauma with CSF leak (10%)
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6
Q

Neisseria Meningitidis Meningitis

A
  • affects children and young adults; mortality 3-13%
  • serogroups A, B, C, Y and W135
  • epidemics usually caused by serogroups A and C
  • serogroup B in recent outbreaks (universities)
  • predisposition in those with congential deficiencies in terminal complement components (C5-C8, and perhaps C9) and properdin deficiencies
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7
Q

Streptococcus agalactiae meningitis

A
  • important etiologic agent in neonates; mortality 7-27%
  • early-onset septicemia (life-threatening infection) associated with prematurity, premature rupture of membranes, low birth weight
  • late onset meningitis (> 7 days after birth)
  • disease in adults less common
  • infants can become infected in childbirth
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8
Q

Listeria monocytogenes meningitis

A
  • rare cause in US (3%); mortality 15-29%
  • outbreaks associated with consumption of contaminated cole slaw, raw vegetables, milk, cheese, processed meats
  • common in neonates
  • disease in adults associated with:
  • elderly
  • malignancy
  • diabetes mellitus
  • alcoholism
  • immune suppression (primarily young and old)
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9
Q

Haemophilus influenzae meningitis

A
  • causes 7% of cases in US; mortality 3-6%
  • capsular type b strains were in >90% of serious infections
  • concurrent pharyngitis or otitis media in >50%
  • previously in children <6 years of age associated with:
  • sickle cell disease
  • diabetes mellitus
  • pneumonia
  • immune deficiency
  • alcoholism
  • head trauma with csf leak
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10
Q

incidence of bacterial meningitis in the US has

A

decreased over the decades

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11
Q

conjugate vaccines

A

uses an antigen. it is covalently bonded to a carrier protein and this allows it to be presented on an MHC molecule. the T cell is then able to recognize the carrier protein and activate the B cells which produce the antibodies.

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12
Q

conjugate vaccines against meningeal pathogens

A
haemophilus influenzae type b:
-licensed in 1990
-decreased cases more than 90%
streptococcus pneumoniae:
-licensed in 2000 (7-valent vaccine)
-13-valent vaccine
neisseria meningitidis
-licensed in 2005
-serogroups A, C, Y, and W135
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13
Q

Pathogenesis

A
  • mucosal colonization and local invasion
  • nasopharyngeal acquisition of a new organism
  • fimbriae
  • transport
  • bacteremia
  • bacterial capsule
  • host defense mechanisms
  • meningeal invasion
  • they have cilia-like (fimbriae) or surface characteristics that allow them to attach to the mucosa and then they are transported in
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14
Q

blood-brain barrier

A

bacteria must either move through the interior of endothelial cells (transocytosis) or between them (paracellular)

  • meningococci:paracellular
  • pneumococci: transocytosis
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15
Q

pathophysiology

A

the bacteria can multiply unchecked once in the subarachnoid space. this causes separation of BBB or separation of tight junction and leads to neutrophils coming into the brain. now with these immunoglobulins, inflammation occurs where it should not.

  • increased blood-brain barrier permeability
  • subarachnoid space inflammation
  • cerebral edema (excess accumulation of fluid in the intracellular or extracellular spaces of the brain)
  • increased intracranial pressure
  • altered cerebral blood flow
  • neuronal injury
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16
Q

most prominent features

A

fever
headache
meningismus (stiff neck)
altered sensorium

17
Q

What are the two signs used to help diagnose?

A

Kernig’s sign: resistance to hyperextension of the knee at a 90 degree angle of the hip
Brudzinski’s neck sign: laying flat, bringing the head forward and getting a reflex from the legs and knee thrust upward

18
Q

Lumbar Puncture

A

diagnostically used to collect CSF

19
Q

Complications of Lumbar Puncture

A
  • headache
  • painful paresthesias
  • local bleeding or infection
  • spinal subdural or epidural hematoma
  • meningitis
  • brain herniation
20
Q

Prior to Lumbar Puncture, these things must be absent

A
  • immunocompromised state
  • history of CNS disease
  • new onset seizure
  • altered consciousness
  • papilledema
  • focal neurologic deficit
21
Q

How many tubes are used for CSF Analysis and for what?

A
4 tubes. 
tube 1: cell count
tube 2: glucose, protein
tube 3: culture
tube 4: cell count
22
Q

Normal CSF Analysis

A
appearance: clear
opening pressure: 70-180 mm H2O
WBC: 0-5/mm3 (mononuclear)
RBC: absent (if not traumatic)
glucose: 50-80 mg/dL
CSF/serum glucose: >0.6
protein: 15-45 mg/dL
23
Q

CSF findings in bacterial meningitis

A
opening pressure: 200-500 mm H2O
WBC count: 1000-5000/mm3
percentage of neutrophils: >= 80%
protein: 100-500 mg/dL
glucose: < 0.4
24
Q

principles of antimicrobial therapy

A
penetration into CSF
-penicillin 0.5-2% with uninflamed meningitis
-penicillin 5% with inflamed meninges
bacterial activity within purulent CSF
-infection in area of impaired host defense
-concentration exceeds MBC by 10-20 fold
pharmacodynamics
-time-dependent killing
-concentration-dependent killing
25
Q

What is MIC?

A

stands for minimum inhibitory concentration of antibiotics. it is the lowest concentration of antibiotic that prevents visible growth.

26
Q

what is the MIC for pneumococcal susceptibility to penicillin?

A

if the strain is susceptible it is =< .06 micrograms/mL

if the strain is resistant it is >= .12 micrograms/mL

27
Q

what does adjunctive (supplementary) dexamethasone do?

A

attenuates subarachnoid space inflammatory response resulting from antimicrobial-induced lysis

28
Q

when to use dexamethasone?

A
  • recommended for infants and children with Haemophilus influenzae type b meningitis and considered for pneumococcal meningitis in childhood
  • recommended in adults with pneumococcal meningitis
  • administer concomitant with or just before first antimicrobial dose
29
Q

chemoprophylaxis

A
refers to the administration of preventing disease or infection.
Regimens:
-rifampin
-ciprofloxacin
-azithromycin
-ceftriaxone