Encephalitis Flashcards
What is the presentation of encephalitis?
- Fever, chills/rigors
- Headache, nausea & vomiting
- Focal neurological deficits
- Obtundation / Altered mental state
- Behavioral disturbance (consider possibility of HSV causing temporal lobe dysfunction)
- Seizures
What are the pathogens that cause encephalitis?
Viral* (Most common): HSV, VZV, EBV, CMV, Enterovirus, HIV
- HSV is most common; affects TEMPORAL lobe on CT brain
- HSV1 most commonly causes encephalitis
- HSV2 most commonly causes meningitis
Bacterial: Listeria, mycobacteria, syphilis, mycoplasma pneumonia
Fungal: Cryptococcus
Parasites: Toxoplasma (protozoa)
What are the investigations required for encephalitis?
Bloods: FBC, PT/PTT, UECr, Blood culture
LP: CSF opening pressure, cell count with differential, glucose, protein
LP: CSF gram stain, cultures and PCR.
- Send for HSV / VZV PCR
- Detection of specific viral IgM antibodies is considered to be diagnostic of neuroinvasive disease
- Consider serology for certain viruses (West nile, rabies, Toxoplasma)
Brain MRI
- Identify anatomical sites affected
- CT scan only if MRI unavailable or cannot be performed
- Brain biopsy should only be done in patients with encephalitis of unknown etiology whose conditions deteriorate despite acyclovir therapy
What are the clinical features of HSV Encephalitis?
Usually involves the temporal lobe, leading to:
- Seizures
- Visual defects – upper quadrantanopia
- Aphasia (if dominant lobe)
- Amnesia
What is the management of encephalitis?
Empiric therapy
- Empirical Acyclovir therapy is always initiated in all patients with suspected encephalitis pending results of diagnostic studies.
- Patients who present with clinical/epidemiological clues of rickettsial infection should be treated empirically with doxycycline
- If patient is presumed to have bacterial meningoencephalitis start on empiric therapy as well
Confirmed HSV / VZV encephalitis – Acyclovir 10mg/kg IV q8hr
Confirmed CMV encephalitis – ganciclovir +/- foscarnet