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Meningitis Commonly Asked Questions

Meningitis Commonly Asked Questions. Stephen J. Gluckman, M.D. What are normal CSF findings?. Protein 0.45 gm/L Elevated with Diabetes Elevated with neuropathies of any cause Elevated with increasing age Elevated by bleeding into the CSF (SAH or traumatic) 0.01 gm/L for every 1000 RBC’s.

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Meningitis Commonly Asked Questions

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  1. MeningitisCommonly Asked Questions Stephen J. Gluckman, M.D.

  2. What are normal CSF findings? • Protein • 0.45 gm/L • Elevated with Diabetes • Elevated with neuropathies of any cause • Elevated with increasing age • Elevated by bleeding into the CSF (SAH or traumatic) • 0.01 gm/L for every 1000 RBC’s

  3. What are normal CSF findings? • Glucose • 60 % of blood glucose • In persons with hyperglycemia it takes several hours for CFS and blood glucose to equilibrate • Low CSF glucose • Bacterial infection • Tuberculosis, cryptococcosis, carcinomatous • SAH • Sarcoidosis • Occasional viral

  4. What are normal CSF findings? • Cell count • <5 WBC (all mononuclear) and < 5 RBC considered “normal” • Traumatic tap • WBC/RBC ratio = 1:1000 • Pressure • <20 • In patients with bacterial meningitis • wide range • 40% >30, 10% < 14

  5. Can the CSF reliably distinguish between a bacterial and non-bacterial cause of meningitis? Usually Look at the whole pattern!

  6. Can the CSF reliably distinguish between a bacterial and non-bacterial cause of meningitis? • Glucose • <2.5 suggests bacterial • < 0.5 highly suggests bacterial • Protein • > 2.5 suggests bacterial • Cell count • >500 suggests bacterial • >1000 highly suggests bacterial • % polys • >50 suggests bacterial

  7. Are there exceptions? • Early viral can have a predominance of polys • Some viral can have low CFS glucose • Listeria can have predominance of mononuclear cells rather than polys • TB can have predominance of polys

  8. How much does prior administration of antibiotics alter the CSF findings? Not Much

  9. How much does prior administration of antibiotics alter the CSF findings? • 48-72 hours of prior intravenous antibiotic treatment has little effect on glucose, protein and cell count • It will rarely change the CSF from a “bacterial” to an “aseptic” formula • Prior antibiotic treatment will likely make the cultures negative.

  10. What is the typical clinical presentation of bacterial meningitis? • History • Headache: 75-90% • Photophobia: uncommon • Examination • Fever: 95% • Stiff Neck: 85% • Altered mental status: 80% • All three: 40% • Any one of the three: 100%

  11. How “good” are Kernig and Brudzinski signs? • Originally related to severe, advanced TB meningitis (not bacterial) • Not studied in a prospective study until 2002 (N=297)* • Sensitivity 5% • Specificity 95% *Thomas KE et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2002;35:46-52

  12. What are the common causes of bacterial meningitis? • It depends upon age and risk factors • Age • Neonates: listeria, group B streptococci, E. coli • Children: H. influenza • 10 to 21: meningococcal • 21 onward: pneumococcal >meningococcal • Elderly: pneumococcal>listeria • Risk factors • Decreased CMI: listeria • S/P neurosurgery or opened head trauma: Staphylococcus, Gram Negative Rods • Fracture of the cribiform plate: pneumococcal

  13. What is the proper empirical antibiotic regimen for presumed bacterial meningitis? It depends upon the clinical situation

  14. What is the proper empirical antibiotic regimen for presumed bacterial meningitis? • Neonates • 3rd generation cephalosporin and ampicillin • Children • 3rd generation cephalosporin • Normal adult • 3rd generation cephalosporin and vancomycin (if resistant pneumococci) • Problems with cell mediated immunity (AIDS, steroids, elderly) • Add coverage for listeria with ampicillin or co-trimoxazole • S/P CNS trauma or neurosurgery • Coverage for staphylococcus and gram negative rods with antipseudomonal beta-lactam and vancomycin

  15. How important is the speed of initiating antibiotics in bacterial meningitis? It is important But it is not the critical prognostic factor

  16. How important is the speed of initiating antibiotics in bacterial meningitis? • The clinical outcome is primarily influenced by the severity of the illness at the time antibiotics are initiated • Severity based on • Altered mental status • Hypotension • Seizures

  17. How important is the speed of initiating antibiotics in bacterial meningitis? • No factors • 9% with adverse outcome • One factor • 33% with adverse outcome • Two or three factors • 56% with adverse outcome Therefore, though treatment should be administered ASAP, the impact of antibiotic delay is a function of the severity of disease at the time that treatment is initiated

  18. Steroids or no Steroids? Steroids (today)

  19. Steroids or no Steroids? • Reduces morbidity and mortality* • Give before or at the same time as the first dose of antibiotics • Dose studied • Dexamethazone 10 mg Q6H x 4 days *Only shown for pneumococcal meningitis in adults and haemophilus meningitis in children

  20. Do you need to do a CT scan before an LP? Usually not • A CT scan should never delay therapy (obtain blood cultures)

  21. Do you need to do a CT scan before an LP? • Prospective studies* • N = 412 • Predictors of CNS mass lesion • History • > 60 years old • Immunocompromised • Hx of prior CNS disease • Hx of seizure w/in 1 week prior to onset • Examination • Focal neurological findings • Altered mental status • Papilledema *Gopal et al. Arch Intern Med. 1999;159:2681-5 Hasbun and Abrahams. N Engl J Med 2001:345:1727-33

  22. How contagious is meningitis?Are we at risk when we care for a patient? • Not really • The only bacterial meningitis that is spread from person to person is meningococcal • The risk is very low • Household contacts have about a 1% risk • Health care workers have not been shown to have a risk • After 24 hours of treatment this is no risk

  23. What is “Aseptic” meningitis? • It is a term used to mean non-pyogenic bacterial meningitis • It describes a spinal fluid formula that typically has: • A low number of WBC • A minimally elevated protein • A normal glucose • It has a much bigger differential diagnosis than viral meningitis.

  24. Infectious HSV 1 and 2 Syphilis Listeria (occasionally) Tuberculosis Cryptococcus Leptospirosis Cerebral malaria African tick typhus Lyme disease Non-Infectious Carcinomatous Sarcoidosis Vasculitis Dural venous sinus thrombosis Migraine Drug Co-trimoxazole IVIG NSAIDS What are the treatable causes of aseptic meningitis/encephalitis syndrome?

  25. What are the important things to know about AIDS- associated cryptococcal meningitis? • Generally advanced with CD4 < 100 • Sub-acute onset: fever, headache • Stiff neck is rare • Mortality with treatment is about 15%! • Predictors of death • Altered Mental status, low CSF WBC count, high CSF cryptococcal antigen titer

  26. What are the important things to know about AIDS- associated cryptococcal meningitis? • CSF findings • Elevated pressure is the usual (>70%) • Rest of CSF findings are often unimpressive • WBC <50 • Glucose: normal or slightly low • Protein: normal or slightly elevated • 25% have normal WBC, glucose and protein • CSF cryptococcal antigen: 95-100% sensitive

  27. What are the important things to know about AIDS- associated cryptococcal meningitis? • Treatment • Medical • Induction: amphotericin B 0.7mg/kg x 2/52 • (flucytosine) • Consolidation: fluconazole 400 mg x 8/52 • Maintenance: fluconazole 200 mg • Pressure • Daily LP’s to keep opening pressure <20 • If LP’s are still needed after 1 month shunt

  28. Questions from the Audience?

  29. Meningitis – Who was awake? Which of the following are true statements? • Early viral meningitis can have a predominance of polys • Some viral meningitis can have low CSF glucose • Listeria meningitis can have predominance of mononuclear cells rather than polys • All of the above

  30. Meningitis – Who was awake? Which of the following are true statements? • Early viral meningitis can have a predominance of polys • Some viral meningitis can have low CSF glucose • Listeria meningitis can have predominance of mononuclear cells rather than polys • All of the above

  31. Meningitis – Who was awake? To correct CSF protein concentrations for blood in the CSF the proper ratio is approximately 0.01 gm/L of protein for every 100 RBC’s • True • False

  32. Meningitis – Who was awake? To correct CSF protein concentrations for blood in the CSF the proper ratio is approximately 0.01 gm/L of protein for every 100 RBC’s • True • False

  33. Meningitis – Who was awake? • Which of the following are true about cryptococcal meningitis? • a. A normal CSF effectively rules out cryptococcal meningitis • b. If the CSF pressure is elevated one should not remove more than 10 ml at a time • c. Everyone with HIV infection is at increased risk for cryptococcal meningitis.

  34. Meningitis – Who was awake? • Which of the following are true about cryptococcal meningitis? • a. A normal CSF effectively rules out cryptococcal meningitis • b. If the CSF pressure is elevated one should not remove more than 10 ml at a time • c. Everyone with HIV infection is at increased risk for cryptococcal meningitis. None

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