CSF Infections Flashcards

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1
Q

CSF (General Anatomy)

A
  • surrounds brain and spinal cord
  • produced between 3rd and 4th ventricles
  • entire volume exchanged every 3-4 hours
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2
Q

CSF (functions)

A
  • cushions brain
  • reduces effective weight by factor of 30
  • supplies metabolites
  • removes wastes
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3
Q

Routes of CSF Infections

A
  • Hematogenous spread (most common)
  • Direct spread from infected site (close to or contiguous with CNS - sinusitis, etc.)
  • Anatomic defects in CNS (surgery, trauma, abnormalities)
  • Direct intraneural (along nerves to brain): least common
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4
Q

CSF Infections

A
  • Meningitis: infection within subarachnoid space or leptomeninges
  • Encephalitis: inflammation of brain parenchyma
  • Meningoencephalitis: meningitis and encephalitis
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5
Q

Meningitis (pathogenesis)

A
  • bacteria attach via adherence
  • invades tissue and disseminates
  • protected by humoral immunity (no Ab’s in CSF - STERILE)
  • evade destruction (phagocytosis)
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6
Q

Meningitis (symptoms)

A
  • stiff neck, fever, headache, nausea

- change in mental status, permanent mental change in kids

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7
Q

Meningitis (lab findings)

A
  • CSF of acute bacterial: large number of PMN’s, decreased glucose, increased protein
  • CSF of chronic bacterial: same as acute, but continues
  • CSF of aseptic: increased lymphocytes, negative bacterial cultures, usually associated with viral
  • CSF of encephalitis: like bacterial but cell counts lower, see lymphs later
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8
Q

Meningitis (at risk)

A
  • ICP’s
  • people with CNS shunts (S. epi)
  • those with viral infections
  • those with brain abscesses
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9
Q

Acute Bacterial Meningitis (agents)

A

S. pneumo, N. meningitidis, H. flu, S. agalactiae, E. coli, Elizabethkingia meningosepticum, Listeria monocytogenes, GNR’s

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10
Q

Newborn meningitis

A

GNR’s, Group B Strep, Listeria monocytogenes

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11
Q

Infant meningitis

A

Group B Strep, H. flu, S. pneumo, N. meningitidis, E. coli

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12
Q

Kids/young adult meningitis

A

S. pneumo, N. meningitidis, Group B strep, S. aureus, Enterobacter

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13
Q

Adult meningitis

A

S. pneumo, N. meningitidis, Listeria, GNR’s

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14
Q

CSF shunt infections

A
  • 2/3 of infections are Staph
  • rest are gram-negatives (E. coli, Kleb, Proteus, Propionibacterium)
  • Candida
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15
Q

Viral meningitis

A
  • aseptic meningitis
  • Enteroviruses and herpesviruses (most common)
  • mumps virus, LCMV, HIV (less common)
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16
Q

Other meningitis causes

A
  • Mycobacteria TB and avium (in AIDS patients)
  • spirochetes
  • fungal infections (Cryptococcus)
  • parasitic infections (protozoa)
17
Q

Meningoencephalitis

A
  • most commonly caused by viruses

- involvement of cerebral cortex

18
Q

Brain abscesses

A
  • commonly bacterial

- Streptococcus

19
Q

CSF fluid collection

A
  • 3-4 tubes collected
  • first tube is most contaminated
  • tubes 2 and 3 go for cell count and diff
  • other tubes go to micro and chemistry
  • CSF must be hand-delivered immediately
  • NEVER refrigerate CSF (except for viral studies)
20
Q

CSF processing

A
  • centrifuge specimen
  • decant supernatant into sterile tube
  • vortex