Meningitis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of meningitis?

A

An inflammation of the leptomeningeal (pia and arachnoid mater) coverings of the brain, most commonly due to infection

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2
Q

What are the bacteria that cause meningitis and which groups do they cause it in?

A

Neonates:-Group B streptococci

  • Escherichia coli
  • Listeria monocytogenes

Children:

  • Haemophilus influenzae
  • Neisseria meningitidis
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae

Adults:

  • Neisseria meningitidis
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Tuberculosis

Elderly:

  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Listeria monocytogenes
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3
Q

What are the viral causes of Meningitis?

A

Enteroviruses

Mumps

HSV

VZV

HIV

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4
Q

What are the fungal causes of meningitis?

A

Cryptococcus (common cause of meningitis in HIV patients)

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5
Q

What are the other causes of meningitis?

A

Aseptic meningitis (not due to microbes)

Mollaret’s meningitis (recurrent benign lymphocytic meningitis)

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6
Q

What are the risk factors involved with meningitis?

A
  • Close communities (e.g. college halls)
  • Basal skull fractures
  • Mastoiditis
  • Sinusitis
  • Inner ear infections
  • Alcoholism
  • Immunodeficiency
  • Splenectomy
  • Sickle cell anaemia
  • CSF shunts
  • Intracranial surgery
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7
Q

Summarise the epidemiology of meningitis

A

2500 in the UK per year

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8
Q

What are the presenting symptoms of meningitis?

A
  • Severe headache
  • Photophobia
  • Neck or backache
  • Irritability
  • Drowsiness
  • Vomiting
  • High-pitched crying or fits (common in children)
  • Reduced consciousness
  • Fever
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9
Q

What is important to ask about in the history a patient with suspected meningitis?

A

IMPORTANT: take a good travel history and exposure history and take not of exposure to any of the following

  • Rodents (lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus)
  • Ticks (Lyme borrelia, Rocky Mountain spotted fever)
  • Mosquitoes (West Nile virus)
  • Sexual activity (HSV-2, HIV, syphilis)
  • Travel
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10
Q

What are the signs of meningitis on physical examination?

A
  • Photophobia
  • Neck stiffness
  • Kernig’s Sign +ve - with the hips flexed, there is pain/resistance on passive knee extension
  • Brudzinski’s Sign +ve - flexion of the hips when the neck is flexed

Also be aware of signs of infection (fever, tachycardia, hypotension, skin rash and altered mental state)

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11
Q

What are the possible investigations for meningitis?

A
  • Bloods
  • Imaging
  • Lumbar puncture
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12
Q

What bloods do you do when suspecting meningitis?

A

Two sets of blood cultures

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13
Q

What imaging do you do when suspecting meningitis?

A

CT scan - exclude mass lesion or raised ICP before LP

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14
Q

What may you find when conducting a lumbar puncture when suspecting meningitis?

A

-MC&S

Bacterial meningitis:

  • Cloudy CSF
  • High neutrophils
  • High protein
  • Low glucose

Viral meningitis:

  • High lymphocytes
  • High protein
  • Normal glucose

TB meningitis:

  • Fibrinous CSF
  • High lymphocytes
  • High protein
  • Low glucose
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15
Q

How would you manage meningitis?

A
  1. IMMEDIATE IV Antibiotics (before LP)
    - First choice: 3rd generation cephalosporin (e.g. cefotaxime or ceftriaxone)
    - Benzylpenicillin may be used as an initial blind therapy
  2. Dexamethasone IV
    - Given shortly before or with the first dose of antibiotics
    - Associated with a reduced risk of complications
  3. Resus:
    - Manage in ITU
    - Notify public health services
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16
Q

Possible complications of meningitis

A
  • Septicaemia
  • Shock
  • DIC
  • Renal failure
  • Seizures
  • Peripheral gangrene
  • Cerebral oedema
  • Cranial nerve lesions
  • Cerebral venous thrombosis
  • Hydrocephalus
  • Waterhouse-Friderichsen Syndrome (bilateral adrenal haemorrhage caused by severe meningococcal infection)
17
Q

What is prognosis for patients for meningitis?

A

Mortality rate from bacterial meningitis: 10-40% with meningococcal sepsis

Viral meningitis is self-limiting