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MENINGITIS

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Title: MENINGITIS


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MENINGITIS
  • Laurie J Burton, MD
  • PEM Fellows Conference
  • December 6, 2006

2
OUTLINE
  • Pathophysiology
  • Cases
  • Neonatal meningitis
  • The bugs, the drugs
  • HSV, Listeria, Enterovirus
  • Dex for who?
  • CT before LP
  • Interpreting CSF / Lab testing

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PATHOPHYS
  • The blood-brain barrier, which excludes most
    macromolecules and microorganisms, is due to the
    cellular configuration of the cerebral
    capillaries, the choroid plexus, and arachnoid
    cells
  • This barrier excludes not only most microbes, but
    also excludes immune defenses derived from serum

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PATHOPHYS
  • Antibodies found in the normal CNS are derived
    from the serum.
  • Levels of IgG and IgA in the CSF are
    approximately 0.2 to 0.4 percent of the serum
    levels.
  • Since diffusion of macromolecules across the
    barrier is largely size dependent, IgM is present
    at even lower levels.
  • There is also no lymphatic system in the usual
    sense, and few, if any, phagocytic cells.
  • Complement is also largely excluded.

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PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
  • Therefore, although the barrier deters invasion
    of infectious agents, it hampers their clearance
    once it is penetrated.
  • . Therefore, bacteria that enter this space
    undergo an initial phase of logarithmic growth,
    accounting for the often explosive onset of acute
    bacterial meningitis

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DDX ORG
  • Bacterial infections Partially treated
    bacterial meningitis, bacterial infection with a
    parameningeal focus (brain or epidural abscess),
    tuberculosis
  • Viral infections Herpes simplex
    meningoencephalitis, cytomegalovirus,
    enteroviruses, rubella, lymphocytic
    choriomeningitis, varicella
  • Spirochetal infections Syphilis, Lyme disease
  • Parasitic infections Toxoplasmosis, Chagas'
    disease
  • Mycoplasma infections M. hominis infection,
    Ureaplasma urealyticum infection
  • Fungal infection Candidiasis,
    coccidioidomycosis, cryptococcus
  • Trauma Subarachnoid hemorrhage, traumatic
    lumbar puncture
  • Malignancy Teratoma, medulloblastoma, choroid
    plexus papilloma and

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Case 1.
  • 5 week old with fever, irritability, poor
    feeding. History of maternal herpes in first
    trimester.
  • FSWU done, CSF only able to obtain enough for
    culture.
  • Ampicillin and cefotaxime started. Should you
    also start acyclovir?

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HSV
  • DOL 0 - 4 weeks most common per Red Book
  • 1st week, more often disseminated (sepsis,
    elevated transaminases)
  • 2nd-3rd week more often meningitis

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  • In a neonate (ie lt 4 weeks old)
  • Just takes 1 vesicle

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HSV
  • Significant of neonates with HSV who do not
    manifest skin lesions
  • Consider in neonates with sepsis syndrome,
    elevated ALT/AST or PT/PTT, CSF pleocytosis or
    even RBCs especially with negative bacterial
    cultures

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HSV
  • Neonatal HSV meningitis/encephalitis high
    morbidity and mortality regardless of treatment

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HSV
  • In neonates, scraping of skin lesions and
    additional cultures from conjunctivae, throat,
    nasopharynx, stool, and urine specimens can aid
    in the diagnosis of CNS disease for HSV

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HSV
  • In the majority of patients, HSV mucosal lesions
    precede signs and symptoms of meningeal
    inflammation with a mean interval of one week
  • Beyond the neonatal period, the incubation period
    ranges from two days to 12 days, with a mean of
    four days

27
HSV
  • Herpes CNS infections (meningitis, encephalitis)
    require 21 days of acyclovir
  • PCR available

28
MOLLARETS
  • Mollaret's meningitis is characterized by
    recurrent episodes of aseptic meningitis. Using
    polymerase chain reaction (PCR) based testing,
    HSV-2 has been strongly associated with
    Mollaret's meningitis, a form of benign recurrent
    aseptic meningitis
  • Additional few cases have been reported due to
    HSV-1 and EBV

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Case
  • 2 week old infant with fever. Infants mother
    makes her own cheese and sausages
  • FSWU
  • On Gram stain of CSF

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LISTERIA
  • Furthermore, when organisms are seen, Listeria
    may resemble pneumococci (diplococci) or
    diphtheroids (Corynebacteria) or be Gram-variable
    and be confused with Haemophilus species Thus,
    Listeria should always be considered when
    "diphtheroids" are reported to be growing from
    blood or CSF cultures

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LISTERIA
  • Listeria is the one cause of bacterial meningitis
    in which a substantial number of lymphocytes (gt25
    percent) can be seen in the CSF differential count

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Tb meningitis
  • cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) white blood cell count
    of lt1000/mm3, clear appearance of CSF, lymphocyte
    proportion of gt30, and protein content of gt100
    mg/dL.

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LISTERIA
  • Cephalosporins are inactive in vitro and
    ineffective clinically
  • Ampicillin with gentamicin for synergy
  • Imipenem or meropenem excellent

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LISTERIA
  • In the newborn, L. monocytogenes can present as
    an early onset sepsis in the first week of life,
    or more commonly, with a late onset after the
    first week of life (usually lt 6 weeks, up to 2
    months).
  • Early-onset disease primarily is sepsis, with
    high neonatal mortality in association with
    maternal illness and premature delivery.
  • With late-onset disease, babies generally are
    full-term and have no history of perinatal
    complications cultures of CSF are more likely to
    be positive than are blood cultures

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LISTERIA
  • ampicillin is added to the standard therapeutic
    regimen of cefotaxime or ceftriaxone plus
    vancomycin when L. monocytogenes is considered
    and to an aminoglycoside if a gram-negative
    enteric pathogen is of concern.

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NEONA
  • DOL 7 irritable infant discharged DOL 2, Full
    fontanelle, poor feeding x 1 day
  • FSWU
  • Antibiotics? Or wait for CSF Gram stain to help
    guide correct coverage?

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NEONA
  • Prolonged hospitalization, add vanco
  • Hardware, manipulation, add vanco
  • Otherwise amp and gent lt DOL 7, amp and
    cefotaxime gt DOL 7
  • If Gram stain shows Gram diplococci gt add vanco

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NEONAT
  • DOL 20, former premature infant,
  • Tlt 36
  • Suspect clinical meningitis
  • FSWU done
  • Treatment?

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NEWBORN
  • if GBS or Listeriosis is suspected (eg, on the
    basis of the Gram stain), add ampicillin because
    vancomycin concentrations in the CSF are not
    bactericidal for these organisms
  • GBS goes out to 3-4 months of age
  • Listeria can go out to 6-8 weeks of age

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NEONATE
  • The clinical presentation of neonatal meningitis
    often is indistinguishable from that of neonatal
    sepsis without meningitis.
  • The most commonly reported clinical signs are
    temperature instability (Tlt 36), irritability,
    and poor feeding or vomiting

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NEONATA
  • Findings of neonatal bacterial meningitis, and
    their approximate frequencies are listed below
  • Fever or hypothermia Tlt 36 60
  • Poor feeding/vomiting 50 percent
  • Respiratory distress (tachypnea, grunting,
    flaring of the nasal alae, retractions, decreased
    breath sounds) 33 to 50 percent
  • Apnea 10 to 30 percent
  • Diarrhea 20 percent

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NEONATE
  • GBS and Escherichia coli are the two most common
    organisms causing neonatal meningitis
  • when E. coli occurs after 6 days of age,
    galactosemia should be excluded

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NEONAT
  • Gram negative rods (esp E coli) in blood or CSF
    in infant gt DOL 6, suspicion for galactosemia
    (vomiting, jaundice, HSM)
  • Send urine for reducing substances

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Neonate-N. Mening
  • Neisseria meningitidis also can rarely cause
    meningitis in newborn infants.
  • 73 percent of neonates that had N. mening disease
    had meningitis

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NEONATAL BACT
  • In a Canadian review of 101 infants with
    gestational age 35 weeks admitted to a tertiary
    care center with a diagnosis of neonatal
    meningitis between 1979 and 1998, the following
    organisms were cultured
  • Group B Streptococcus 50 percent of cases
  • E. coli 25 percent
  • Other gram-negative rods 8 percent
  • Listeria monocytogenes 6 percent
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae 5 percent
  • Group A Streptococcus 4 percent
  • Haemophilus influenzae 3 percent

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NEON / LAB
  • Isolation of a bacterial pathogen from the CSF by
    culture or visualization by Gram stain
  • Increased CSF white blood cell (WBC) count
    (typically gt1000 WBC/microL, but may be lower,
    especially with gram-positive organisms), with a
    predominance of neutrophils

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NEONATE LAB
  • Neonates can have normal CSF parameters and yet
    meningitis
  • If clinical suspicion for meningitis is high,
    empirically treat and ignore normal results

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NEONAT
  • Neonates lt DOL 7, mothers treated antenatally for
    Group B strep, 75 successful
  • ie 25 can still get Group B strep sepsis or
    meningitis

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NEONATE
  • gt1 month of age vancomycin cefotaxime or
    ceftriaxone
  • Gram stain may modify eg ADD ampicillin for the
    presence of gram-positive cocci or bacilli (rods)

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Proven enteroviral meningitis
  • The odds of a CSF white blood cell being
    mononuclear increased by 15.7 (95 confidence
    interval -3.8 to 38.0 P .11) for each day
    of symptoms. Fifty percent of patients with
    symptoms of 1 day or less had predominance of
    mononuclear cells among CSF white blood cells
  • Soft correlation though, other factors such as
    amount of meningeal irritation

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EV -LAB
  • White blood cells (WBC) Pleocytosis usually
    ranges from 10 to 500 cells/microL (higher values
    can be seen with some viruses) mononuclear
    leukocytes predominate in most cases, although
    polymorphonuclear (PMN) leukocytes have been
    described early and late in the course of EV
    meningitis.
  • Normal WBC counts can be seen in EV and more
    rarely with HSV meningoencephalitis
  • Glucose Normal or slightly reduced, usually 40
    percent or more of the serum value.
  • Protein Normal to slightly elevated protein,
    usually less than 150 mg/dL.

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N. MENING
  • w/ meningococcemia, most children (72 percent)
    had one of the three sepsis symptoms (eg, leg
    pain, abnormal skin color, or cold hands and
    feet) at a median time of 8 hours after onset of
    illness, 11 hours sooner than the median time of
    hospital admission (19 hours).

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N. mening
  • Inotropic supportdopamine, dobutamine,
    adrenaline (epinephrine)may be started and then
    given in combination if response is suboptimal.
  • Eventual infusion of fluid up to several times
    the circulating blood volume may be needed.

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N. MENING-Archiv 9/02
  • N. mening notorious (8)for normal CSF and
    culture- tx all cases of suspected N. mening for
    meningitis
  • Gram stain in 70-80 of meningitis, could miss
    30
  • Immunodeficient child, add fungal and
    mycobacterial analyses

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N. MENING
  • The vital signs often show a low blood pressure
    with an elevated pulse rate. The patient should
    be examined for postural hypotension as a sign of
    early vascular instability.

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N. MENIN
  • The mucous membranes of the soft palate, ocular
    and palpebral conjunctiva must be carefully
    examined for signs of hemorrhage. Over 50 percent
    of patients will have petechiae upon presentation
  • Fever and petechiae below the nipple line
    just takes 1 petechiae

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Tumbler test
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Duration of Antimicrobial Therapy for Meningitis
Based on Isolated Pathogen
  • Microorganism Duration of therapy, days
  • Neisseria meningitidis 7
  • Haemophilus influenzae 7
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae 10-14
  • Streptococcus agalactiae 14-21
  • Aerobic gram-negative bacilli 21
  • Listeria monocytogenes 21
  • Neonatal HSV 21

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LATEX AGG
  • Latex Agglutination
  • false-positive results
  • Practice Guideline Committee does not recommend
    routine use
  • most useful for the patient who has been
    pretreated with antimicrobial therapy

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Latex Agglutination
  • Organisms available
  • Neisseria Meningitis
  • HIB
  • S. pneumo
  • Group B strep
  • Cryptococcal (HIV, immunocompromised)

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PCR
  • Organisms available
  • HSV
  • Enterovirus
  • ? Faster PCR assay for Enterovirus?
  • Turn around lt 4 hours
  • Avoid hospitalization
  • ? 2007? (Reimbursement issue)

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Case
  • 3 month old fever, persistent irritability,
    bulging fontanelle
  • FSWU
  • In addition to empiric antibiotics, should you
    use dexamethasone?

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Case (continued)
  • What if you pushed cefotaxime alone and the Gram
    stain looked liked this?
  • Would you now add dexamethasone?

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DEX
  • What Is the Role of Adjunctive Dexamethasone
    Therapy in Patients with Bacterial Meningitis?
  • Neonates
  • At present, there are insufficient data to make
    a recommendation on the use of adjunctive
    dexamethasone in neonates with bacterial
    meningitis

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DEX
  • The 2003 statement by the Committee on Infectious
    Diseases of the American Academy of Pediatrics on
    the use of steroids for pneumococcal meningitis
    is as follows "For infants and children 6 weeks
    of age and older, adjunctive therapy with
    dexamethasone may be considered after weighing
    the potential benefits and possible risks.."

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Dex
  • Is there a downside to Dex?
  • ? Unclear if it affects CSF penetration by
    antimicrobials, since reduce inflammation.
  • Could be most true for vancomycin, which well
    known to have poor CSF penetration

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DEX
  • Dexamethasone should be initiated 10-20 min prior
    to, or at least concomitant with, the first
    antimicrobial dose, at 0.15 mg/kg every 6 h for
    2-4 days.
  • Adjunctive dexamethasone should not be given to
    infants and children who have already received
    antimicrobial therapy, because administration of
    dexamethasone in this circumstance is unlikely to
    improve patient outcome

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DEX
  • Meningococcal meningitis appears to have the
    lowest risk of major neurological sequelae
    compared with pneumococcal and H. influenzae
    meningitis
  • HIB gtgt S. pneumo gtgt N. Mening (in terms of
    neurologic sequelae.) Dexamethasone efficacy
    seems to be in that order as well.

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Dex
  • Bottom line
  • Fairly good evidence to use in the pediatric
    population older than 1 month old age, especially
    if suspect HIB or S. pneumo meningitis as
    potential pathogen

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DEX
  • Clinical scenarioAn 18 year old student is
    brought to the Emergency Department having been
    found collapsed in her room. She had been seen by
    her friends earlier in the day, when she reported
    that she had a severe headache. On examination,
    she is found to have a temperature of 38.40C, a
    GCS of 12 (E3 M6 V3) and slight neck stiffness.
    She is noted to be more settled with the lights
    out. There is no papilloedema and no focal
    neurological signs. You make an initial diagnosis
    of bacterial meningitis, but in view of the
    depressed level of consciousness request a CT
    Brain before lumbar puncture is carried out. This
    will take at least one hour to be organised, and
    in the meantime, you decide to proceed with
    intravenous ceftriaxone. You are unsure whether
    she would benefit from the administration of
    dexamethasone prior to her antibiotics.

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Dex
  • European Dexamethasone in Adulthood Bacterial
    Meningitis Trial
  • In this prospective, randomised, double-blind,
    multicenter trial, which included 301 adults with
    bacterial meningitis, treatment with
    dexamethasone was associated with a reduction in
    mortality (relative risk of death, 0.48 95 CI
    0.24 to 0.96 p 0.04).
  • Therefore, dexamethasone should be given to all
    adults with bacterial meningitis and should be
    initiated before or with the first dose of
    antibiotics.

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DEX
  • Currently there is not sufficient published
    evidence to recommend early use of dexamethasone
    in order to improve neurological outcome in
    children with meningococcal meningitis.
  • One study showed possibly disadvantageous as far
    as hearing is concerned

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PROGNOSIS
  • In one meta-analysis of bacterial meningitis,
    83.6 percent of the surviving children in
    developed countries and 73.9 percent in
    developing countries had apparently complete
    recovery. The most common sequelae present after
    hospital discharge in the remaining children
    were
  • Deafness 10.5 percent, including bilateral
    severe or profound deafness in 5.1 percent
  • Mental retardation 4.2 percent
  • Spasticity and/or paresis 3.5 percent
  • Seizures 4.2 percent

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PROGNOSIS/ EARLY TX
  • The factors contributing to the time required to
    institute therapy were illustrated by a survey of
    93 children presenting to the emergency
    department of two university-affiliated hospitals
    The mean time to initiation of antibiotic
    therapy was two hours. The median time from
    triage to contact with a physician was 45
    minutes, and the time from lumbar puncture until
    the administration of antibiotics was 30 minutes.
    Only one child was treated within 30 minutes

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  • What if antibiotics are given before LP is done?

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STERLIZ OF CSF
  • Among children with meningococcal meningitis who
    were treated with a parenteral dose of an
    extended-spectrum cephalosporin, three of nine
    LPs were sterile within one hour (occurring as
    early as 15 minutes) and all were sterile by two
    hours.
  • Sterilization of the CSF was slower with
    pneumococcl meningitis. The first negative
    culture was obtained four hours and five of seven
    were negative by ten hours.

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LP
  • Lumbar puncture should be deferred
  • signs of cerebral herniation
  • focal neurological signs / papilledema
  • cardiorespiratory compromise
  • risk for brain abscess
  • Immunocompromised
  • Congenital heart with right to left shunt
  • ? Skin/soft tissue infection at LP site
  • ? bleeding disorder
  • (? based on single case reports)

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LP
  • Signs of cerebral herniation
  • Check pupils before you LP
  • Irregular respirations
  • Abnormal tone
  • GCS lt 8
  • Focal signs
  • Contraindications to LP, even if CT normal

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  • What about the patient with fever and seizure? ie
    who do you need to LP?

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FEBR SZ
  • A recently published guideline (Arch Dis Child
    05) for the management of a child with a febrile
    seizure recommends antibiotic treatment for
    children who
  • have meningismus
  • were drowsy before the seizure
  • have altered consciousness gt 1hour after seizure

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FEBR SZ
  • Duration of febrile seizure gt 15 minutes,
    significantly higher rate of bacterial meningitis
    (1 vs 18 range in literature)

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  • What about Gram stains?

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GRAM STAINS ORG
  • Gram positive diplococci suggest pneumococcal
    infection
  • Gram positive cocci or coccobacilli suggest group
    B streptococcus
  • Gram positive rods and coccobacilli suggest
    listerial infection
  • Gram negative (intracellular) diplococci suggest
    meningococcal infection
  • Small pleomorphic Gram negative coccobacilli
    suggest Haemophilus influenzae

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CSF LAB
  • CSF parameters in Harriet Lane (cells, protein,
    glucose)
  • Preterm (neonate)
  • Term (neonate)
  • Child (gt neonate)

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SUMMARY
  • Dex
  • Neonates - No
  • Everyone else - Yes
  • Not HIB or S.pneumo No
  • NO if antibiotics are already given

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SUMMARY
  • Neonates- subtle clinical signs or none, normal
    initial labs possible
  • No vancomycin unless Gram positive cocci in
    pairs/chains (Pneumococcus)
  • Amp/gent lt DOL 7
  • Amp/cefotax gt DOL7

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SUMMARY
  • Remember
  • 1 vesicle in the neonate
  • 1 petechiae, especially below the nipple line

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SUMMARY- Whats the Bug?
  • Gram diplococci
  • Gram cocci
  • Gram rods
  • Gram diplococci
  • Gram - rods
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