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Meningitis and Encephalitis in the Older Patient. Debra Bynum, MD Division of Geriatric Medicine University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. April 2007. Outline. Cases for thought… Meningitis and Encephalitis: general features and causes Diagnosis: review of CSF findings
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Meningitis and Encephalitis in the Older Patient Debra Bynum, MD Division of Geriatric Medicine University of North Carolina Chapel Hill April 2007
Outline • Cases for thought… • Meningitis and Encephalitis: general features and causes • Diagnosis: review of CSF findings • Meningitis: specific causes • Encephalitis: specific causes • Zoom in on important arboviruses and tick-borne illnesses • Summary of diagnosis and treatment • Review of the cases
Cases • 1. Active 78-y/o man with prior hx of aortic valve replacement years ago, presents with fever, slight confusion, dehydration. Initial concern for SBE, but CSF :TNC of 20. His serum Na 128. All cultures negative. What would the DDX include? • 2. 85-y/o with severe dementia admitted with fever, ?stiff neck and worsening confusion and lethargy. CXR and U/A are negative. What would you do? • 3. Healthy community living 75-y/o presents with personality changes, confusion, agitation. She has no fever, no other evidence of infection. What to do? • 4. 80-year-old man presents with low grade fever and coma after several days of myalgias and viral-like illness. Exam is notable for some Parkinsonian type features… initial concern would be for ?
Meningitis • Inflammation of the meninges • Classic triad: • Fever • Headache • Severe, frontal, photophobia, n/v • Jolt accentuation • Meningismus/altered mental status • Meningeal signs • Kernig sign: one leg with hip flexed, pain in back with extension of knee • Brudzinski sign: flexion of legs and thighs when neck is flexed
Encephalitis • Inflammation of the cerebral cortex • Fever, HA, altered mental status • Key: early mental status changes • More commonly viruses • Obtundation/coma • Behavioral or speech problems, neurological signs, seizures • Meningoencephalitis • Difference from meningitis: less likely fever, more likely personality/behavioral changes
Causes of Meningitis • Bacterial • Viral • Fungal: cryptococcus • Mycobacteria: MTB • Parasitic/protozoa: Naegleria fowleri • Noninfectious • Medications • Paraneoplastic
Acute Bacterial Meningitis • Streptococcus pneumoniae • Neisseria meningitidis • Listeria monocytogenes • Haemophilus influenzae: nearly unheard of since vaccinations • Less common: Gram negatives (Klebsiella, E. coli) • History of procedure: Staphylococcus
Viral Meningitis • Aseptic meningitis • Spectrum with encephalitis, meningo-enchephalitis • Enteroviruses • HSV • VZV • Arboviruses (arthropod borne viruses) • West Nile, Eastern Equine, Western Equine, St. Louis, California, Japanese Encephalitis • HIV • Rabies virus • Adenovirus • CMV, EBV
Encephalitis • Viral • HSV • Arboviruses • VZV, CMV, EBV, HIV, rabies • Enteroviruses • Bacterial • Listeria monocytogenes • Tick-borne illnesses • RMSF: Rickettsia rickettsii • STARI: Borrelia lonestari • Lyme: Borrelia burgdorferi • Ehrlichiosis: Ehrlichia chaffoensis
Meningitis in the Elderly • Decreased total incidence; increased in elderly • Increased prevalence of Listeria (25%) • 30-50%: S. pneumoniae • Less likely Neisseria and Haemophilus • Less likely fever and meningeal signs; more likely neurological symptoms, seizure, coma • More often complicated by pneumonia • Older patients with neurological impairment: 50% mortality
Meningitis • Risk Factors • Age (bimodal peak) • Prior neurosurgery, alcoholism, malignancy, steroids, HIV, sinusitis, DM • Clinical suspicion • Triad: fever, nuchal rigidity, altered mental status: only seen in 40% elderly • Only 59% of elderly patients with acute bacterial meningitis had fever • Most have at least ONE symptom
The Diagnosis • LP if suspicion • Do not delay antibiotics if suspected! • CT prior to LP in patients with focal neurological deficits, seizures, HIV, or elderly • MRI: to identify areas of CNS involvement • Temporal involvement with HSV • Basilar meningitis with TB
The Lumbar Puncture: Risks • Headache: 10-25% • Typical: appears suddenly upon standing • Decrease CSF pressure with small leak • Decrease risk: small (<20 g) needle, leave patient prone after procedure • Blood patch • Infection (small) • Local bleeding: traumatic tap to epidural hematoma • Brain herniation
The LP • Opening Pressure • Important data • Only in lateral decubitus (not position usually done under radiology) • Xanthochromia • Yellow/orange color of centrifuged CSF • RBC lysis – oxyhemoglobin, bilirubin • Blood in subarachnoid space at least 2-4 hrs • More likely due to blood in CSF and less likely traumatic tap
CSF: Some Catches • Protein least specific • TB: early neutrophilic predominance • Encephalitis, RMSF, tick-borne illnesses: inc CSF WBC • Listeria: misread as “contamination”/diphtheroids • Listeria: bacterial meningitis that can have significant encephalitis and abscess, and CSF with lymphocytes! • RBCs that do not clear: SAH or HSV
CSF: More Pearls • Correction factors for traumatic tap • “trauma” and RBCs increase protein and with an increase in RBCs come an increase in WBCs • True CSF protein = subtract 1 mg/dL protein for every 1000 RBC/mm3 • True WBC in CSF: actual WBC in CSF – (WBC in blood x RBC in CSF)/ RBC in blood
Strep Pneumoniae Meningitis • Now most common cause (H flu rare) • 30-50% cases of bacterial meningitis in elderly • Otitis 30%, sinusitis 8%, pneumonia 18% • Elderly more often have pneumonia (bad) • Bad markers: older age, low platelets, dec CSF glucose, no otogenic focus • Vaccination: recommended in all over age 65 • Efficacy in elderly/immunocompromised NOT clear • Decrease bacteremia/meningitis
Listeria • Food-borne outbreaks • Herd animals • Common, likely cause of mild GI illnesses • Invasive disease with bacteremia and CNS involvement may follow other GI infection (piggy back…) • Increased risk with depressed cellular immunity: pregnant women, elderly, AIDS, lymphoma, steroid use, transplant patients
Listeria… • Small, anaerobic gm + baccillus • Look like diphtheroids, contaminants • Cerebritis, brain abscess • Confusion, altered LOC, seizure, movement • Mortality 22% in older patients with CNS dz • 20% of all cases of bacterial meningitis in patients over age 60 • Brain abscess: 10% CNS infections • Usually due to bacteremia • Concomitant meningitis in 25-40% (rare with other causes of brain abscess)
Listeria… Big Points • NOT uncommon in elderly • Meningitis, encephalitis, focal brain abscess • Add Ampicillin • Diphtheroids in CSF: listeria unless proven otherwise
TB Meningitis • Tuberculous meningitis (most common) • Intracranial tuberculomas • Spinal tuberculous arachnoiditis • Meningitis: inflammation from rupture of subependymal tubercle into subarachnoid space • Basilar meningitis, CN palsies, hydrocephalus • Subacute or chronic • Initial neutrophilic pattern on CSF • Very high CSF protein may be seen • AFB smears often neg; need HIGH volume sent to lab
Viral Meningitis • Aseptic meningitis • May be difficult to initially separate from partially treated bacterial meningitis (obligates empiric treatment for bacterial) • Differentiate from true aseptic (drug related such as NSAIDs, paraneoplastic)
Viral Meningitis • Finland study: etiology found in 66% patients with aseptic meningitis • Viral encephalitis: etiology only found in 36% cases • Viral prodrome, sore throat, myalgias, ill contacts, GI complaints; summer/fall season • Most common= enteroviruses (25%) • Echoviruses • Coxsackievirus
Viral Meningitis • Less common causes • Adenoviruses: URI sxs, year round • CMV, EBV, HIV, influenzae • Measles, mumps, rabies, rubella, varicella • ?future avian flu (usually not CNS sxs, more URI/pneumonia/ARDS and DIC)
Encephalitis Lethargica… • The Awakenings… • 1916: von Economo described CNS disorder with lethargy and Parkinsonian features following viral syndrome with pharyngitis • 1916-1927 epidemic; now sporadic cases • 1918: influenza pandemic, ?connection (?immune mediated process)
Encephalitis • More likely to be viral • Etiology only found in 35% cases • HSV-1: 10% cases (but accounts for over 50% cases in patients over 50) • HSV-2 • VZV (?up to 10% in some series) • Tick or insect borne diseases: 10%
Encephalitis • Acute Viral Encephalitis • Direct viral infection of neuronal cells • Perivascular inflammation • Destruction of gray matter • Post-Infectious Encephalomyelitis • Follows viral or bacterial infection • Demyelination of white matter • ?autoimmune component triggered by infectious agent
HSV Encephalitis • 2-4 cases/million people/year • Acute infection or more commonly reactivation of latent infection (trigeminal nerve ganglion) • Characteristic site of damage: temporal lobe • MRI findings of necrosis in temporal lobe • Necrosis = RBC s on CSF!
HSV Encephalitis • Dysphasia, bizarre behavior, seizures • Abnormal EEG • High mortality: 30% with treatment • Survivors: 10% long term disability • Fever +/- • Treatment: Acyclovir (60-75% mortality without treatment)
HSV Encephalitis: Big Points • Odd behavior, think encephalitis • If thinking encephalitis, add acyclovir • RBCs on CSF (with xanthochromia or lack of clearing between tube 1 and 4), think HSV • Temporal symptoms • Temporal necrosis or abnormalities on MRI
Arboviruses and Encephalitis • Arbovirus: Arthropod Borne Virus • RNA viruses transmitted by mosquitoes or ticks • 10 % cases of sporadic encephalitis (?higher in elderly, up to 50% cases during epidemics)
Arboviruses and Encephalitis • Alphavirus family: • Eastern Equine Encephalitis ** • Western Equine Encephalitis • Flavivirus family: • St Louis Encephalitis ** • Japanese Encephalitis • California Encephalitis • West Nile Virus **
West Nile Virus • 1937: West Nile district Uganda (mild cases) • Middle east/ Israel (14% fatality) • 1996: outbreak in Romania (4% fatality) • 1999: NY outbreak (11% fatality) • Subsequent west spread to most states • 2002: 4156 reported cases in US, 284 deaths • 2003: 9858 cases, 262 deaths
West Nile Virus • Season: summer • Mosquito transmission (currently infects 43/ 174 different types of North American mosquitoes) • Other routes • Placenta • Lactation • Transfusion • Organ transplant
West Nile Virus • Disease of the elderly • Higher mortality in elderly • Other risk factors not clear (?maybe HTN and DM leading to better virus entry)
WNV: Predictors • Admission diagnoses: • 30%: aseptic meningitis • 15%: fever • 18%: viral infection • 14%: UTI • 10% pneumonia • 7% : encephalitis • 5%: probable WNV (year 2001) • Mortality rates highest with: • Initial diagnosis of encephalitis (35% of those who died), • No headache (50% had HA, 7% those that died had HA), and • Initial mental status changes
WNV • Presenting symptoms • HA, fever, mental status changes • CN findings, optic neuritis • Myoclonus • Flaccid Paralysis • With or without encephalitis • Asymmetric weakness/paralysis, no sensory loss • Anterior horn cells (polio like) • Absent DTRs
WNV • Movement Disorders • Parkinsonian • Tremors • Bradykinesia • Cogwheel rigidity • Postural instability • Masked facies • 80-100% will have rest or intention tremor • 30% will have myoclonus
WNV: Diagnosis • High index of suspicion • CSF: usually 200 TNC; 5-10% can have over 500 TNC, 5% with < 5 TNC • CSF with 50% neutrophils • Elevated CSF protein • CSF for ab studies: anti WNV ab, and negative SLE IgM (up to 40% cross reactivity in earlier studies)
WNV: Treatment • ?nucleoside analogues (ribavirin – no benefit in Israel) • Human Immunoglobulin : protective antibodies (patients from Israel with high titers of anti-WNV ab); if effective, only in early disease • ?vaccine development (effective in horses in 2001) • ?inactivated JEV vaccine?
Tick-Borne Diseases • RMSF ** • Lyme Disease ** • Ehrlichiosis ** • STARI ** • Tularemia • Babesiosis • Colorado Tick Fever
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever • Rickettsia rickettsii • Gm negative intracellular bacteria • Endothelial cells: small vessel vasculitis • Southeast, summer • Dog Tick, Wood Tick • 2nd most common tick-borne illness • Fever/headache/nausea/rash 80% • Rash: blanching maculopapular, palms/soles, spreads centrally, later petechial and purpuric • Hyponatremia, thrombocytopenia, inc ALT • CSF: inc TNC, inc protein; neg gram stain
RMSF: Diagnosis • Clinical suspicion • Low threshold to empirically treat • Rash may be absent in 20% • RMSF serologies: initial may be negative; need convalescent titers several weeks later
RMSF: Treatment • Doxycycline 100 BID • Do not delay • ?newer quinolones: probably, but no studies and no recommendations • No indication for prophylactic treatment after uncomplicated tick bite • Prevention: frequent inspection
RMSF: Big Points • Empiric Treatment if even suspected • In North Carolina, any fever, HA, neuro syndrome will need treatment • First serology titers NOT reliable • Hyponatremia, low platelets, elevated LFTs, think RMSF… • Do not wait for the rash…