Title: Infections of the Central Nervous System
1Infections of the Central Nervous System
- Helmut Albrecht, M.D.
- November 2008
2CNS Infections
- Meningitis
- Bacterial, viral, fungal (cave chemical, cancer)
- Encephalitis
- Bacterial, viral
- Meningoencephalitis
- Abscess
- Parenchymal, subdural, epidural
3Terminology
- Pleocytosis increased WBCs in the CSF
- Hypoglycorrhachia low CSF glucose
- Meningitis inflammation of meninges
- Encephalitis inflammation of the brain
- Meningoencephalitis both of the above
- Myelitis inflammation of the spinal cord
- Encephalomyelitis encephalitis myelitis
4Terminology (2)
- Parameningeal infection localized infection
next to the meninges, e.g. - brain abscess
- subdural empyema
- suppurative thrombophlebitis
- mycotic aneurysm
5Case
- A 35 yo man is brought to the ER
- h/o 5 days fever and chills
- His wife relates that he has been very confused
today and she called 911 after a seizure - PMHx is unremarkable except for a splenectomy at
age 14 after a MVA - Meds prn tylenol in the last week
- NKDA
- Vaccinations are up to date
6Case
- Exam
- Ill appearing man
- Temp 39 C
- Lethargic and can answer simple questions but can
give no meaningful history. - Neck is stiff to flexion and extension
- Fine petecchial rash on chest and upper arms
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8Exam in suspected CNS Infection
- Mental Status
- Cranial nerve and fundoscopic exam
- Meningeal Signs
- General exam rashes, lymphadenpathy
- Labs CBCD, BMP, PT/PTT, bHCG, blood cultures,
UA CS - Radiology CT head - uncontrasted if no focal
signs, contrast if mass suspected (not needed in
gt90 of patients with meningitis)
9Lumbar Puncture
- No need to obtaining CT before LP
- Age lt60
- Immunocompetent
- No h/o CNS disease
- No recent seizure (lt1week)
- Normal sensorium cognitition
- No papilledema
- No focal neuro deficits
10Initial Management of Patients with Signs of
Meningitis
11Some pointers on the LP
- If you think of it, do it!
- In chronic problems, rule out localized
intracranial pathology for acute problems, dont
delay if there are no localizing signs! - Save extra fluid!
12LP
- Increased intracranial pressure is expected but
LP contraindicated if a mass is present or if
epidural spinal abscess is suspected - Left lateral decubitus position
- L3-L4 interspace or L4-L5 interspace
- Think about your studies before the LP
13LP
- Tube 1 cell count and differential (2 cc)
- Tube 2 glucose and protein (2 cc)
- Tube 3 gram stain and routine culture,
- cryptococcal antigen, AFB stain and culture,
- cytology, special studies (VDRL, viral studies,
- PCRs), keep the rest (fill er up)
- Tube 4 cell count and differential (2 cc)
14Key CSF Features
- CSF is not liquid gold get enough to get your
answer - CSF Glucose is 2/3 of serum glucose (cave DM)
- Red cells (normally 0), WBCs (normally lt 5/mm3)
- Differential (normally all mononuclear cells)
- Protein (normally 15 to 45 mg/dL)
- Traumatic LPs
- CSF pro increases by 1 for every 1000 RBCs
- Tube 1 and Tube4 for RBCs when SAH is in the
differential or tap is traumatic - Very high CSF protein levels will make CSF yellow
- Send a full tube of CSF for cytology not just a
few ccs
15Lumbar Puncture
- Contraindications
- Infection in overlying skin
- Increased ICP with focal lesion
- Relative
- Coagulopathy
- Thrombocytopenia
- If delay is anticipated obtain blood cultures and
GIVE antibiotics - You have 2 hours after Abx before sensitivity is
affected
16Acute bacterial meningitis
- A MEDICAL EMERGENCY
- Consider in every patient with a history of URI
evolving into meningeal symptoms vomiting,
headache, lethargy, confusion, stiff neck - Clinical picture may be unimpressive when patient
is first seen
17Epidemiology
- 400 per 100,000 in neonates
- 1-2 per 100,000 in adults
- Strep pneumoniae Neisseria meningitidis
- HIB vaccine has been very effective
- Mortality
- 5 in children beyond infancy
- 25 in neonates and in adults
18Triad of acute bacterial meningitis
- Fever (bacterial invasion of blood CSF)
- Stiff neck (nuchal rigidity due to protective
reflexes from inflammation of the subarachnoid
space) - Brain dysfunction (intracranial pressure plus
inflammation resulting in nausea/vomiting,
headache, irritability/excitability, altered
mental status, obtundation)
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22Pathogenesis of meningitis
- Mucosal colonization
- Mucosal invasion
- Bacteremia
- Meningeal invasion
- Bacterial replication in CSF
- Host response to bacterial antigens
- Subarachnoid space inflammation
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24The blood-brain barrier in meningitis
- 99 of bacteremic adults do not develop
meningitis - However, 1/3 of bacteremic infants develop
meningitis suggesting immaturity of blood-brain
barrier - Barrier seems to function unidirectionally
(inoculation of subarachnoid space causes
bacteremia 1/3 of the time)
25Grams stain of CSF in meningitis
- Sensitivity is 70 to 80, but false-positives
reduce the overall usefulness by about one-half - Beware of decolorization artifacts!
- In meningococcal meningitis, there may be only a
few microorganisms, easily missed among the red
background debris
26Bacterial Menigitis
- Age less than 3 months
- Group B strep
- L. monocytogenes
- E. coli
- Strep pneumoniae
27Neonatal meningitis due to gram-negative bacilli
- Especially susceptible
- Infants with myelomeningocele, marasmus, or
middle ear disease - Pathogens E. coli (61) Proteus (11)
- 81 of E. coli have K1 capsular antigen versus
20-40 of E. coli in normal stools
28Bacterial Meningitis
- 3 Months to 18 years
- N. meningitidis
- S. pneumoniae
- H. influenzae
29Bacterial Meningitis
- Age 18 to 50 years
- S. pneumoniae
- N. meningitidis
- H. influenzae
30Bacterial Meningitis
- Over age 50 years
- S. pneumoniae
- L. monocytogenes
- Gram (-) bacilli
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32Clinical Features
- History
- Living conditions
- College dorm/barracks?N meningitidis
- Trauma
- Recent neurosurgery?Staph/gram(-) rod
- Immunocompetence
- Immunization hx
- None?HiB
- Antibiotic use
33Epidemiology of bacterial meningitis some other
associations
- Lower socioeconomic status increased risk of H.
influenzae, S. pneumoniae - Immunosuppression, lymphoma, or leukemia
Listeria monocytogenes - Skull fracture S. pneumoniae
- Congenital dermal sinuses E. coli, S.
epidermidis, diphtheroids, Pseudomonas - Splenectomy S. pneumo, H. flu, N. meningitidis,
listeria
34Acute Bacterial Meningitis (nosocomial)
- 40 of cases associated with
- head trauma
- neurosurgery
- shunts
- Mortality 35
- Trauma, surgery SA, gram negatives
- Shunts SA, CNS, Propionibacteria
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36OUTBREAK!
- Setting Pig farms in Sichuan, China
- 3 farm workers died with meningitis
- Spreading infection
- 215 infected, 50 with meningitis
- 24 with SSTI, 26 with sepsis
- Chinese health authorities send physicians,
epidemiologists, and microbiologists - New human adopted strain of Strep. suis
37The big three of bacterial meningitis
- Streptococcus pneumoniae Numerous serotypes of
which about 20 cause about 80 of cases of
invasive disease - Haemophilus influenzae Of the 6 encapsulated
types (a through f), only type b regularly causes
meningitis - Neisseria meningitidis 80 of isolates from
nasopharynx or CSF have fimbriae
38Haemophilus influenzae meningitis
- Peak susceptibility between 7 and 12 months 93
of cases under age 5 - Frequency increased in 2nd half of 20th century
prior to the vaccine - Complications subdural effusions, cerebral
anoxia, cortical vein thrombophlebitis,
blindness, hearing loss, spasticity, hemiplegia,
convulsions, low IQ
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40H. influenzae meningitis current issues
- Case-fatality rate is only 3 to 8, but 30 to
50 of survivors have some mental deficits. - Drug resistance (by plasmid-mediated
beta-lactamase production) - Epidemiology in day-care centers
- Preventability by vaccination
41Invasive meningococcal disease
- Can have meningitis, meningococcemia, or both
- About 30 to 40 of patients have meningococcemia
without meningitis - About 10 to 20 of patients have fulminant
meningococcemia (50-60 die) - About 1 to 2 of patients have chronic
meningococcemia
42Epidemiology of meningococcal disease
- About 1 to 2 cases/100,000 in temperate areas
occurs especially in the winter and spring - Serogroups A and C are known as epidemic
strains group B is major cause of sporadic
disease in the U.S. group Y is also a case of
sporadic disease (also 29-E W-135 Z)
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48Vaccine
- There are 12 known serogroups of Neisseria
meningitides - In US 60 of all cases of meningococcal disease
and 80-90 of all cases in adolescents, are
caused by serogroups C, Y, and W-135. - Both the polysaccharide vaccine (PSV4) and the
MCV4 vaccine provide protection against these
three strains as well as serogroup A. - Unfortunately, neither vaccine provides
protection against serogroup B. This serogroup
causes nearly one third of all cases of
meningococcal disease in the United States and is
the most frequent cause of meningococcal disease
in infants.
49Pneumococcal meningitis
- The major cause of acute meningitis in adults
20 to 60 mortality and 1/2 of survivors have
residua - Most patients have predisposing causes otitis
sinusitis pneumonia skull trauma with CSF leak
endocarditis alcoholism impaired host defenses - Diagnosis often delayed due to comorbidity
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51Listeria monocytogenes meningitis
- 2 of cases of meningitis in the U.S.
- Disproportionately affects the very young, the
old, and the debilitated - CSF Grams stains may be misleading
- Bacteremia is common
- Neonates syndromes of intra-uterine acquisition
versus late-onset listeriosis
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53Aseptic meningitis etiology of the term
- Wallgren, 1925 A disease characterized by acute
onset, meningeal symptoms, CSF pleocytosis,
generally mononuclear, with sterile cultures, a
relatively benign clinical course, of short
duration, with recovery - Wallgren, 1951 A syndrome of multiple causes
and not a specific etiologic illness.
54Aseptic meningitis current operational definition
- A characteristic syndrome with meningeal
irritation, CSF pleocytosis, and absence of
microorganisms by direct examination or culture.
The term viral meningitis is permissible if the
illness is typical of an acute viral process
with mononuclear pleocytosis and a short,
uncomplicated course. However, it should be noted
that many other processes can mimic viral
meningitis. . . .
55Other causes of aseptic meningitis syndrome
- Partially-treated bacterial meningitis
- Tuberculous or fungal meningitis
- Parameningeal infection
- Syphilis or leptospirosis
- Toxoplasmosis, amebiasis
- Sarcoidosis
- Drugs (Sulfa, IVIG, NSAIDS)
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57Viral Meningitis
- 85 secondary to
- Echo-
- Coxsackie
- Entero-
- Also consider HSV, and EBV
- Neutrophils may predominate in the CSF in the
first 24 hours - Consider starting ATBs until cultures come back
(-)
58Causes of viral meningitis
- Enteroviruses cause gt 1/2 of proven cases,
typically in the summer in persons lt 40 - Others Flaviviruses, mumps viruses lymphocytic
choriomeningitis herpesviruses (HSV-1, HSV-2,
VZV, CMV) measles Epstein-Barr virus
alpha-virus bunyavirus hepatitis virus
59Pearls on viral meningitis
- Enteroviruses Rash is typically maculopapular
but can be petecchial (mainly ECHO and Coxsackie) - Mumps low CSF glucose is common
- Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus intense
pleocytosis is common - If picture looks like aseptic meningitis but CSF
formula is confusing, repeat LP in about 6 hours
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65Diagnosis
66The syndrome of chronic meningitis
- Some combination of fever, headache, lethargy,
confusion, nausea, vomiting, and stiff neck - Frequent elevation of CSF protein, predominantly
lymphocytic pleocytosis, low CSF glucose - Process fails to improve or progresses during at
least 4 weeks of observation.
67Chronic Meningitis
- Myriad infectious causes,
- most common TB
- spirochetes (syphillis, Lyme)
- bacteria (Brucella)
- fungi (Cryptococcus, Candida, Sporothrix,
Coccidiodes, Histoplasma) - Many non infectious causes
- (Behçets, neoplasm, sarcoid)
68Chronic Meningitis (cont.)
- Important diagnostic considerations
- Cell count in CSF may not be diagnostic/specific
- (1/3 patients with TB have PMN predominance,
normal - CSF in up to 50
- Large volumes of CSF, repeat taps may increase
yield - PCR available for TB, more sensitive than
culture - Skin testing (including repeats) useful for TB
but - non-reactive PPD in about 20
- If all else fails, may try empiric trials (TB,
fungi)
69Cryptococcal meningitis
- Prior to HIV, up to 50 of patients had no
underlying disease - HIV disease points out strong association with
impaired T-cell function - Over 85 have demonstrable cryptococcal antigen
in CSF - Papilledema in 50 cranial nerve palsies in 20
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71Syphilitic meningitis
- Very rare
- 50 have focal signs 1/3 have cranial nerve
palsies - Usually subacute
- Negative serum serology in 35 negative CSF
serology in 14 - Specificity of CSF FTA-ABS in doubt
72Encephalitis
- Myriad causes
- Viruses HSV, VZV, Herpes B, arboviruses
- Bacteria Rickettsia, Ehrlichia, Listeria,
- Syphilis, Lyme, Leptospira
- Fungi Crypto, histo,etc.
- Protozoa Naegleria, Acanthamoeba, malaria,
- toxoplasma, trypanosoma
- Most with available treatment or public health
- implications, so specific diagnosis important
73Herpes simplex encephalitis
- The most important cause of sporadic viral
encephalitis - Necrotizing. Often with RBCs in CSF
- Prominent temporal lobe involvement (aphasia,
bizarre behavior, hallucinations)
74Encephalitis (cont.)
- HSV
- PCR available, accurate, precludes need for brain
bx if pos - Very acute, acyclovir/valacyclovir highly
effective - Herpes B
- Simian herpes virus related to HSV (asymptomatic)
- Devastating (usually fatal) illness in humans
- Transmission bite/mucous membrane contact
- Prompt treatment essential
- p.o. valaciclovir for postexposure
- iv acyclovir for symptomatic persons
75Brain abscess (2)
- Presentation is often that of a non-specific mass
lesion tumor is a frequent preoperative
diagnosis - Ring-enhancing lesion on CT scan
- 20 are cryptogenic remainder are secondary to
contiguous or distant infection or to trauma
including neurosurgery
76Brain abscess
- Presentation often that of a non-specific mass
lesion - tumor is a frequent preoperative diagnosis
- Ring-enhancing lesion on CT scan
- 20 cryptogenic, 80 with distant
infection/trauma - Classic triad Fever, headache, focal neurologic
deficit - (all three present in less than 50 of cases)
- Focal neurologic deficits correlate well with
anatomic - location frontal, temporal, parietal,
occipital, - cerebellar
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78Brain Abscess
- Focal brain infection related to
- penetrating trauma
- infection of paranasal sinuses
- infection of middle ear
- extension of dental abscess
- infectious emboli
- hematogenous spread (often in the
- setting of immune suppression)
79Bacterial Brain Abscess--Microbiology
- Predisposing Condition Microbiology
- Otitis, mastoiditis Strep, anaerobes,
Enterobacteriaceae - Sinusitis Streptococci, Bacteroides, Staph,
- Hemophilus, Enterobacteriaceae
- Dental Fusobacterium, Prevotella,
- Bacteroides, Streptococci
- Penetrating trauma Staph, Strep,
Enterobacteriaceae - (including surgery)
- Bacterial endocarditis Staphylococci,
Streptococci
80Other Bacteria Causing Focal Brain Lesions
- Nocardia
- Patients with defects in cell-mediated immunity
- (esp. steroids, organ transplants, HIV,
neoplasm) - Listeria
- Mycobacteria
81Brain abscess (4)
- Streptococci in 60 to 70 (especially
peptostreptococci and S. anginosus) - Bacteroides species 20 to 40
- Enterobacteriaceae 23 to 33
- Fungi 10 to 15
- Pneumococci, H. influenzae, protozoa, helminths
lt 1
82Management of Brain Abscess
- Imaging to confirm suspicion
- Aspiration or surgery if large lesions
- and/or microbiology unclear
- (e.g. pos. blood cx in patient with SBE).
- Long-term abx (such as 3rd gen. ceph.
- or high dose PCN metronidazole)
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85Subdural empyema
- Sinusitis (especially frontal) is the
predisposing factor in 50 of cases - Otitis media or mastoiditis predisposes in 10 to
20 of cases - High prevalence of anaerobic organisms
86Cavernous sinus thrombosis
- Often from paranasal sinusitis or infection of
face or mouth - Unilateral periorbital edema exophthalmos
chemosis - Papilledema fixed eye with involvement of
nerves III, IV, V, and VI - S. aureus the most common pathogen
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89Kernig sign(Vladimir Kernig, 1840-1917, Russian
physician)
- Limitation in passive extension at the knee due
to spasm of the hamstrings - Basis A protective reaction to prevent the pain
of stretching inflamed sciatic nerve roots - Kernigs method Done with patient sitting (now
usually done with patient supine)
90Brudzinskis sign(Josef Brudzinski, 1874-1917,
Polish pediatrician)
- Flexion at the knees and hips in response to
passive flexion of the neck - Basis Protective reaction to prevent stretch of
inflamed sciatic roots (similar to Kernigs sign) - May be more sensitive if done in the sitting
position
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