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1. Central Nervous System4. Infections
4. BRAIN ABSCESS space occupying lesion MCC Streptoc. & Staphyloc.
Predisposing conditions:
Acute bacterial endocarditis.
Cyanotic Congenital Heart Diseases (right to left shunt).
Blood bypassing filtering action of lung and go directly to brain
Chronic pulmonary suppurations. Lung abscess, cystic fibrosis
Direct spread: otitis media, mastoiditis or sinusitis.
Clinical picture:
Focal neurologic deficits
?ICP, ?CSF protein & ?cell count, but normal glucose.
Morphology:
Central focus of suppuration, surrounded by edema
Later a fibrous capsule & reactive gliosis.
Fibroblasts from larger vessels of brain try to wall of infection to form fibrous cap
Brain has no fibroblasts however in an abscess fibroblasts from the BV form fibrosis. Other damage has liquefaction necrosis
5. BRAIN ABSCESS space occupying lesion Complications:
Herniation of fibrous capsule
Abscess rupture: ventriculitis, meningitis
Rupture into left temporal horn of lateral ventricle causing ventriculitis ? usually a fatal complication
Prognosis:
With surgery & antibiotics mortality rate is < 10%
6. VIRAL ENCEPHALITIS (VE) life-threatening infection of the brain
Characterized by
Perivascular & parenchymal mononuclear cellular infiltrate lymphocyte infiltrate
Microglial nodules
Focal proliferations of microglia, try to phagocyte
Neuronophagia
Individual neurons undergoing necrosis surrounded by phagocytic cells – PMN’s and microglia
In some VE, inclusion bodies are diagnostic; e.g.
Intranuclear “Cowdry type A, pink in colour” in HSV1 present in the temporal lobe
Cytoplasmic “Negri bodies” in Rabies hippocampus
7. VIRAL ENCEPHALITIS (VE) Lesions of VE tend to localize in specific areas (viral tropism); e.g.
HSV -- temporal lobe with hemorrhagic necrosis
JC virus -- cerebral white matter. (oligodendrocytes disease is PML = progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy )
Rabies – brain stem
Present with focal or diffuse neurologic symptoms & signs and altered level of consciousness.
CSF profile is similar to viral meningitis.
Clear, glucose is normal and some lymphocytes in CSF
8. VIRAL ENCEPHALITIS (VE) Subacute Sclerosing panencopla = measles virus or vaccine ( bulbar poles is 1% and deadly polio affects the anterior horn)Subacute Sclerosing panencopla = measles virus or vaccine ( bulbar poles is 1% and deadly polio affects the anterior horn)
9. ARTHROPOD-BORNE VE Outbreaks of “epidemic” viral encephalitis.
All have animal hosts (wild birds, forest rodents) & mosquito or tick vectors (zoonoses)
Clinical course varies widely
Characterized by:
Perivascular infiltrates
Foci of necrosis with Neuronophagia
Necrotizing vasculitis
No inclusion bodies
Major types in USA:
Eastern Equine (EEE). Seen in Atlantic, Gulf areas.
Most serious fulminant form of encephalitis ? death in 4-5 days
Western Equine (WEE), seen in West, Midwest.
Venezuelan Equine (VEE), seen in South.
St. Louis (SLE), seen in all regions of USA.
California (CE), seen in East, North-Central regions. NB no inclusion bodies NB no inclusion bodies
10. Herpes Simplex (HSV) Encephalitis HSV-1 (Labialis) Encephalitis:
MCC of sporadic Viral Encephalitis in USA
Seen in children & young adults
Causes a hemorrhagic, necrotizing encephalitis
Localized in the Temporal lobes.
HSV-1 resides in the Gasserian ganglion in patients with labial herpes
Sensory ganglion on the 5th CN that sends out sensory nerve fibers in the lip
Also has sensory fibers that go out over the temporal lobe – virus can get to the brain via these fibers
Only ~ 10% have a Hx of recurrent labial herpes
11. Herpes Simplex (HSV) Encephalitis “Cowdry type A” intranuclear inclusion bodies
Eosinophilic intranuclear inclusions with poorly defined halo
Found in both neurons & Glia.
Presents with classic temporal signs:
Alterations in mood, behavior & memory.
HSV-2 (Genitalis) Encephalitis:
Causes generalized severe encephalitis ( not limited to temporal lobe) in up to 50% of neonates born by vaginal delivery to women with active HSV-2 infection.
Prevent with C section delivery
12. Herpes Simplex (HSV) Encephalitis
13. POLIOMYELITIS Clinical:
Mild gastroenteritis ? meningitis ? paralysis
May have paralysis of respiratory muscles
Fecoroal infection
Morphology:
Virus attacks the anterior horn motor neurons & sometimes cranial nerve motor nuclei ? lower motor neuron paralysis (flaccid paralysis).
Process:
Early: perivascular infiltrates, Chromatolysis & Neuronophagia
Late: loss of motor neurons & gliosis
Vaccines: Sabin (live virus) & Salk (killed virus).
Chromatosis – nucleus pushed to the side
14. POLIOMYELITIS Entero-viruses that enter via oral-fecal route
3 strains of poliovirus
Live vaccines (sabin) must not be given to immuno-compromised children!
Post-polio Syndrome:
Progressive weakness, ? muscle mass (especially calf), pain: this is only in a few cases
Don’t know why this occurs
15. POLIOMYELITIS
16. HIV-1 & CNS 1. HIV-1 aseptic meningitis:
Seen in 10% of patients, 1-2 weeks after seroconversion
Virus can be isolated from CSF
Usually self limited infection
2. HIV-1 encephalitis:
After AIDS develop
Occurs late
Presents with AIDS dementia motor complex:
Insidious onset of dementia, apathy, motor abnormalities, ataxia, bladder & bowel incontinence
Brain shows
Mild cerebral atrophy, mainly involving subcortical gray & white matter
Virus-containing microglial nodules with multinucleated giant cells (***CLASSIC FINDING) fusion of microglial cells
Demyelination & reactive gliosis
17. HIV-1 & CNS 3. Vacuolar myelopathy:
Involvement of the spinal cord
Demyelination of posterior column
Results in ataxia
Demyelination of lateral columns
Results in spastic paraparesis – UMN signs in lower extremities
This is not due to direct HIV virus – Virus NOT identified in spinal cord (It looks like subacute demyelination of the cord due to vitamin deficiency, Probably due to impaired utilization of vitamin B12 )
HIV enters the CNS via monocytes/macrophages
Have CD4 markers which interact with the envelope protein of the virus. Microglia and protoplasmic astrocytes are vehicles for HIV entry into the brain ie the have markers
18. HIV-1 & CNS Microglia & astrocytes also have CD4 markers
They become infected & destroyed by the virus
Fusion of macrophages produces
Multi-nucleated giant cells, which are characteristic of AIDS (AIDS Dementia Complex)
Inflammatory reaction causes damage:
Cytokines, viral products (e.g. gp 120) & cross-reacting antibodies may cause damage to:
Oligodendrocytes (demyelination)
Neurons (neurologic deficit)
Opportunistic infections of the CNS further complicate the clinical picture:
Toxoplasmosis, Cryptococcosis, CMV, JC virus
(PML), Herpes, Varicella-Zoster, Tuberculosis.
19. PROGRESSIVE MULTIFOCAL LEUKOENCEPHALOPATHY (PML) Infection of Oligodendrocytes by a Polyoma virus (JC virus).
This virus infects the vast majority of normal individuals before the age of puberty, without causing symptomatic disease.
In immunocompromised persons (*AIDS) it causes
Diseases is very aggressive
Multifocal demyelinating disease
Most probably represents reactivation.
Insidious onset of:
Weakness, visual loss, ataxia, dementia ? death within 6 months.
Myelin stain –
Normally should be all blue – (luxol fast blue) also used to stain axons
De-myelinated punched out pink areas throughout the entire brain
20. PML Morphology:
Lesions consist of patches of demyelination
Oligodendrocytes show large nuclei with intranuclear viral inclusions
Astrocytes show atypical nuclei
Polyoma viruses are
Oncogenic & the nuclear atypia may be an expression of ? risk for Gliomas (esp. Astrocytomas)
21. PML Myelin stain – stains myelin BLUE
Normally should be all blue – but see completely demyelinated punched out pink areas throughout the entire brain
22. FUNGAL INFECTIONS OF THE CNS Seen in immunocompromised patients
As a terminal event in a more disseminated systemic infection.
MCC:
Candida albicans, Mucor, Aspergillus fumigatus
Cryptococcus neoformans (true in AIDS patients) – involves the basal meninges ( negatively staining capsule with India ink) Cryptococcus in the CNS is AIDS defining diagnoses
Histoplasma capsulatum, Coccidioides immitis, Blastomyces dermatitidis. MUCO MICOSES MOST COMMON ORIGINATION FRON RINAL SINUSMUCO MICOSES MOST COMMON ORIGINATION FRON RINAL SINUS
23. Patterns of CNS disease include:
Chronic Meningitis:
MCC Cryptococcus neoformans
Affects the basal Leptomeninges ? may cause non-communicating hydrocephalus.
? Fibrosis – block flow to 4th ventricle
Vasculitis:
MCC Mucor & Aspergillus fumigatus ?
Invade walls of vessels, intravascular thrombosis & infarction.
Focal Encephalitis; with granulomas & abscesses:
MCC Candida, Cryptococcus
24. Cryptococcal Meningitis Cryptococcal meningitis – India ink preparation
quick and easy diagnosis
note the big thick mucoid capsule that doesn’t pick up the stain