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Case 1. A 35 yo man is brought to the ER after 5 days of 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 traumatic injury.Meds ? prn tylenol in the last week.NKDAVaccinatio
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1. CNS Infections J. Ned Pruitt II
Associate Professor of Neurology
Medical College of Georgia
2. Case 1 A 35 yo man is brought to the ER after 5 days of 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 traumatic injury.
Meds – prn tylenol in the last week.
NKDA
Vaccinations are up to date.
3. Case 1 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. A fine petechial rash is on his chest and upper arms.
4. Case 1 – What next? More examination or history?
Labs?
Radiology?
Medications?
5. CNS Infections Meningitis
Bacterial, viral, fungal, chemical, carcinomatous
Encephalitis
Bacterial, viral
Meningoencephalitis
Abscess
Parenchymal, subdural, epidural
6. CNS Infections Signs and symptoms
Fever
Headache
Altered mental status -lethargy to coma
Neck stiffness – meningismus – flex/ext
Increased intracranial pressure – papilledema, nausea/vomiting, abducens palsies, bulging fontanelle in infants
7. Exam in suspected CNS Infection Mental Status
Cranial nerve and fundiscopic exam
Meningeal Signs
General exam – rashes, lymphadenpathy
Labs – CBCD, BMP, PT/PTT, bHCG, blood cultures, UA C&S
Radiology – CT head - uncontrasted if no focal signs, contrast if mass suspected
8. LP 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
9. LP Tube #1 – glucose and protein
Tube #2 – cell count and differential
Tube #3 – gram stain and rountine culture, cyrptococcal antigen, AFB stain and culture
Tube #4 – VDRL, or viral studies (PCR)
10. CSF Characteristics
11. Key CSF Features CSF is not liquid gold – get enough to get your answer
CSF Glucose is 2/3 of serum glucose
Important in diabetic patients
Traumatic LPs –
CSF pro increases by 1 for every 1000 rbcs
Tube #1 and Tube#4 for rbcs when SAH is in the differential not as a routine
Very high CSF Protein levels will make CSF yellow
Send a full tube of CSF for cytology not just a few cc’s
12. Case 1 CT of head negative.
LP - OP (opening pressure) 250mm, glucose 17, protein 92, Rbcs 3, Wbcs 280 with 89% pmns, 11% lymphocytes
Gram stain - + for Gram neg organisms
13. Bacterial Meningitis Streptococcus pneumoniae
Hemophilus influenzae
Listeria moncytogenes
Group B streptococcus
Niesseria meningitidis
14. Bacterial Menigitis Age less than 3 months-
Group B strep
L. Monocytogenes
E. coli
Strep pneumoniae
15. Bacterial Meningitis 3 Months to 18 years –
N. meningitidis
S. pneumoniae
H. influenzae
16. Bacterial Meningitis Age 18 to 50 years
S. pneumoniae
N. meningitidis
H. influenzae
17. Bacterial Meningitis Over age 50 years
S. pnemoniae
L. monocytogenes
Gram (-) bacilli
18. Treatment of Bacterial Meningitis PCN G or 3rd generation cephalosporin and consult ID
Steroids – Dexamethasone IV q6 for 4 days
19. Viral Meningitis Very common
Often caused by enteroviruses
Treatment is supportive
20. Viral Encephalitis Encephalitis (Meningoencephalitis)
Altered mental status and seizures
Herpes Simplex virus – medial temporal lobe
Acyclovir
Management of seizures
Very high morbidity and mortality
PCR diagnosis of CSF
West Nile, St Lousi E, EEE, CMV
21. Chronic Meningitis Immunocompromised patients
Cryptococcus neoformans
HIV
M. tuberculosis
M. avium
Carcinomatous meningitis
Lung, breast
22. Case 1 Meningitis caused by N. Meningitidis
Treatment with 3rd generation cephalosporin for 10 days
Dexamethasone
Prophlaxis with Rifampin for contacts