CNS infections Flashcards

1
Q

Most likely diagnosis- Stiff neck, photophobia, meningismus

A

meningitis

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2
Q

Most likely diagnosis- Confusion

A

Encephalitis

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3
Q

Most likely diagnosis- Focal neurological findings

A

abscess

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4
Q

Meningitis infection bacteria

A

Streptococcus pneumonia (60%), group B strep (14%), Haemophilus influenzae (7%), Neisseria meningitidis (15%), and Listeria (2%). Staph occurs in those with recent neurosurgery

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5
Q

Meningitis presentation

A
  • fever, headache, neck stiffness, photophobia
    -presents over several hours
    focal neurological abnormalitis occur in up to 30% of patients
    -If confusion present must order CT and LP
    -Cryptococcal meningitis may be present for several weeks
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6
Q

Most likely diagnosis- AIDS with <100 CD4 cell/ul

A

Cryptococcus

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7
Q

Most likely diagnosis- Camper/hiker, rash shaped like a target, joint pain, facial palsy, tick remembered in 20%

A

Lyme disease

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8
Q

Most likely diagnosis- Camper/hiker, rash moves from arms/legs to trunk, tick remembered in 60%

A

Rocky Mountain spotted fever (Rickettsia)

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9
Q

Most likely diagnosis- Pulmonary TB in 85%

A

Tuberculosis

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10
Q

Most common diagnosis- no symptoms

A

Viral

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11
Q

Most common diagnosis- Adolescent, petechial rash

A

Neisseria

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12
Q

CSF eval- cell count very high with neutrophils, protein level high, glucose low, stain 50-70%, culture 90%

A

Bacterial meningitis

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13
Q

CSF eval- cell count 10s-100s with lymphocytes, protein level possibly elevated, glucose level possibly decreased, stain and culture negative

A

Cryptococcus, lyme, rickettsia

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14
Q

CSF eval- cell count 10s-100s with lymphocytes, protein level markedly elevated, glucose level may be low, stain and culture negative

A

Tuberculosis

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15
Q

cell count 10s-100s with lymphocytes, protein level usually normal, glucose level usually normal, stain and culture negative

A

Viral

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16
Q

When is head CT prior to LP the correct answer?

A

If papilledema, seizures, focal neurological abnormalitis or confusion interfering with the neurological exam are present. Therefore if there is the possibility that a space=occupying lesion may cause herniation

17
Q

If contraindication to immediate LP

A

give antibiotics. Better to treat and decrease accuracy of a test than risk permanant brain damage

18
Q

When is bacterial antigen test (Latex agglutination test) indicated?

A

When the patient has received antibiotics prior to the LP and the culture may be falsely negative. Not sentative but if positive highly specific

19
Q

Most accurate test for Tuberculosis?

A

Acid fast stain and culture on 3 high-volume lumbar punctures. Centrifuge the specimen to concentrate the organisms. TB has the highest CSF protein level. An acid fast stain of a single, uncentrifuged sample of CSF has only 10% sensitivity.

20
Q

Most accurate test for Lyme and Rickettsia?

A

Specific serologic testing, ELISA, western blot, PCR.

21
Q

Most accurate test for Cryptococcus?

A

India ink 60-70% sensitive. Cryptococcal antigen is more than 95% sensitive and specific.

22
Q

Best initial treatment for bacterial meningitis?

A

Ceftriazone, Vancomycin, and steroids if thousands of neutrophils present. Add ampicillin if immunocompromised (Listeria).Tx based on cell count. Culture takes 2-3days. gram stain is useful if positive, false negative 30-50%. Protein and glucose levels to nonspecific.

23
Q

Steroids (dexamethasone) is only proven to lower mortality in?

A

S.pneumoniae

24
Q

Listeria is resistant to all _______________ but sensitive to _______________

A

cephalosporins, penicillins

25
Q

Risk factors for Listeria?

A

elderly, neonates, steroid use, AIDS/HIV, immunocompromied, including alcoholism, pregnant

26
Q

Additional management for Neisseria meningitidis.

A

Respiratory isolation, Rifampin or ciprofloxacin to close contacts to decrease nasopharyngeal carriage (close contacts include household contacts, kissing, or sharing cigarettes or eating utensils. Routine school/work contacts do not count. Healthcare workers qualify only if they intubate the patient, perform suctioning, or have contact with respiratory secretions)

27
Q

A man comes to the ED with fever, severe headache, neck stiffness, and photophobia. On PE he is found to have weakness of his left arm and leg. What is the most appropriate next step in the management of this patient?

a. ceftriaxone, vancomycin, and steroids
b. heat CT
c. Ceftriaxone
d. Neurology consultation
e. Steroids

A

A. When there is a contraindication to an immediate LP, the most important step is to initiate treatment. A head CT is important for this patient because of focal neurological deficits, but it is more important to initiate therapy. Additionally if the head CT shows a mass lesion you may never be able to perform and LP

28
Q

What is the most common neurological deficit of untreated bacterial meningitis?

A

Eight cranial n. deficit or deafness

29
Q

When is consultation the correct answer on Step 2?

A

Almost never

30
Q

Encephalitis presentation

A

acute onset of fever and confusion

31
Q

Most common cause of encephalitis

A

Herpes simplex

32
Q

Initial test in encephalitis

A

Head CT first because of the presence of confusion

33
Q

What is the most accurate test of herpes encephalitis?

a. Brain biopsy
b. PCR of CSF
c. MRI
d. Viral culture of CSF
e. Tzanck prep
f. Serology for herpes (IgG, IgM)

A

B. PCR is more accurate than a brain biopsy. Serology is useless, 95% of population will be positive. Tzanck prep can be done as the initial test on a genital ulcerative lesion. Viral culture is the most accurate test of genital or skin lesion, but not of CSF or the brain

34
Q

Best initial treatment for herpes encephalitis?

A

Acyclovir. Famciclovir and Valacyclovir are not available as IV formulations. Foscarnet is used for acyclovir-resistant herpes.

35
Q

A woman is admitted for herpes encephalitis confirmed by PCR. After 4d of acyclover her creatinine level begins to rise. What is the most appropriate next step?

a. Stop acyclovir.
b. Reduce the dose of acyclovir and hydrate.
c. Switch to oral famciclovir or valacyclovir
d. Switch to foscarnet.

A

B. Oral medications such as famciclovir and valacyclovir are insufficient for herpes encephalitis. Although acyclovir may occasionally be renal toxic because the medication precipitates in the renal tubules, foscarnet has far more renal toxicity.