Encephalitis Flashcards

1
Q

Define encephalitis.

A

Inflammation of the brain parenchyma associated with neurological dysfunction.

Can be caused by infectious or non-infectious causes.

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2
Q

What % of encephalitis cases have an identifiable aetiology?

A

An aetiological agent is only identified in around 50% of cases.

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3
Q

What are the most common viral causes of encephalitis?

A
  • HSV1 and 2 - HSV-1 causes 95% of cases in adults
  • Arboviruses
  • CMV
  • EBV
  • VZV
  • HIV
  • Measles
  • Mumps
  • Rabies
  • Japanese B encephalitis
  • West Nile virus
  • Tick-borne encephalitis
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4
Q

What are the most common non-viral causes of encephalitis?

A
  • Bacterial meningitis
  • TB
  • Malaria
  • Listeria
  • Lyme disease
  • Legionella
  • Leptospirosis
  • Aspergillosis
  • Cryptococcus
  • Schistosomiasis
  • Typhus
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5
Q

What is the pathophysiology of encephalitis? Which part of the brain is most commonly affected?

A

Virus usually gains entry and replicates in regional tissues before disseminating to the CNS by haematogenous or retrograge axonal transport.

HSV1 classically affects temporal and inferior frontal lobes

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6
Q

What are the risk factors for encephalitis?

A
  • Age <1 or >65years
  • Immunodeficiency
  • Blood/body fluid exposure
  • Organ transplantation
  • Animal or insect bites - mosquitoes, ticks, animals with rabies/brucellosis
  • Travel
  • Swimming/diving in warm freshwater or nasal/sinus irrigation
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7
Q

What is the sequence of events in encephalitis?

A
  1. Infectious prodrome (raised temp, lymphadenopathy, cold sores, conjunctivitis, meningeal signs)*
  2. Then odd behaviour, reduced GCS, focal neurology or seizure

*if no infectious prodrome suspect encephalopathy

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8
Q

List some non-infectious causes of encephalopathy ?

A
  • hypoglycaemia
  • hepatic encephalopathy
  • diabetic ketoacidosis
  • drugs
  • hypoxic brain injury
  • uraemia
  • SLE
  • Wernicke’s (give vit B1 if in doubt)
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9
Q

What are the signs of encephalitis?

A
  • Bizarre behaviour or confusion
  • Reduced GCS or coma
  • Focal neurological signs
  • History of travel or animal bite
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10
Q

What are the symptoms of encephalitis?

A
  • Fever, rash, cough, (GI infection)
  • Headache
  • Seizures
  • Some patients have meningism
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11
Q

What investigations would you do for encephalitis?

A

Bloods:

  • Cultures
  • PCR for HSV
  • Throat swab and MSU

Imaging:

  • Contract enhanced CT - do before LP; normal in 1 in 3.
  • EEG - lateralised periodic discharges at 2 Hz

Invasive:

  • LP- elevated proteins and lymphocytosis. Send for viral PCR including HSV
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12
Q

How do you manage encephalitis?

A

Mortality if untreated = 70%

  • IV aciclovir within 30min of admission (10mg/kg TDS given over 1hr) for 14-21 days (specific therapies exist for CMV and toxoplasmosis)
  • Supportive therapy, HDU or ICU if necessary
  • Symptomatic treatment e.g. phenytoin for seizures
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13
Q

What is the difference in management of viral encephalitis vs meningitis? How do you distinguish between the two ?

A

Viral meningitis - does not require treatment in the immunocompetent

Viral encephalitis - always requires antiviral treatment - differentiated from meningitis on clinical grounds: confusion, behavioural change, neurological deficits.

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14
Q

What is the relation of cold sores to HSV encephalitis?

A

Peripheral lesions (e.g. cold sores) have no relation to the presence of HSV encephalitis

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