Meningitis Flashcards

1
Q

Definition

A

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

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2
Q

Aetiology

A
· BACTERIAL
o Neonates (Group B streptococci, Escherichia coli, Listeria monocytogenes)
o Children (Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria meningitidis, Streptococcus pneumoniae)
o Adults (Neisseria meningitidis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Tuberculosis)
o Elderly (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Listeria monocytogenes)
· VIRAL
o Enteroviruses
o Mumps
o HSV
o VZV
o HIV
· Fungal
o Cryptococcus (common cause of meningitis in HIV patients)

· Others
o Aseptic meningitis (not due to microbes)
o Mollaret’s meningitis (recurrent benign lymphocytic meningitis)

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3
Q

Risk factors

A
o Close communities (e.g. college halls)
o Basal skull fractures
o Mastoiditis
o Sinusitis
o Inner ear infections
o Alcoholism
o Immunodeficiency
o Splenectomy
o Sickle cell anaemia
o CSF shunts
o Intracranial surgery
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4
Q

Presenting symptoms

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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5
Q

Important components of history

A

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

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6
Q

Signs on physical examination (meningism)

A

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

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7
Q

Signs on physical examination (infection)

A
o Fever
o Tachycardia
o Hypotension
o Skin rash
o Altered mental state
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8
Q

Investigations

A

· Bloods
o Two sets of blood cultures

· Imaging
o CT scan - exclude mass lesion or raised ICP before LP

· Lumbar Puncture
o MC&S

o Bacterial meningitis:

· Cloudy CSF
· High neutrophils
· High protein
· Low glucose

o Viral meningitis:
· High lymphocytes
· High protein
· Normal glucose

o TB meningitis:
· Fibrinous CSF
· High lymphocytes
· High protein
· Low glucose
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9
Q

Management plan

A

· IMMEDIATE IV Antibiotics (before LP)
o First choice: 3rd generation cephalosporin (e.g. cefotaxime or ceftriaxone)
o Benzylpenicillin may be used as an initial blind therapy

· Dexamethasone IV
o Given shortly before or with the first dose of antibiotics
o Associated with a reduced risk of complications

· Resuscitation
o Manage in ITU
o Notify public health services

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10
Q

Possible complications

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)
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11
Q

Prognosis

A

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

· Viral meningitis is self-limiting

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