Meningitis Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of Meningitis:

A
  • Inflammation of the meninges
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2
Q

Meningitis: Causative organisms

A
  • Viral (most common)
    • Echo
    • Polio
    • Herpes
    • Mumps (rare due to MMR)
  • Bacteria (most dangerous)
    • Neisseria meningitidis
    • Strep pneumoniae
    • Haemophilus influenzae (rare if immunised)
      • Neonates
        • Group B haemolytic strep
        • E. coli
        • Listeria monocytogenes
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3
Q

Pathophysiology of meningitis

A
  • Damage caused by exaggerated inflammatory response rather than the organism itself
    • Cerebral oedema
    • ↑ intracranial pressure
    • ↓ cerebral perfusion
      • Cerebral cortical infarction
      • Hydrocephalus (fibrin deposits block resorption of CSF by the arachnoid villi)
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4
Q

Clinical features of meningitis:

  • Septic
  • Non-specific
  • Meningeal
A
  • Septic signs (commonly present before meningeal signs)
    • Fever / Hypothermia (ominous)
    • Tachycardia
    • Tachypnoea
    • Cold extremities (prolonged capillary refill)
    • Hypotension
    • Colour change
  • Non-specific signs (infants and young children)
    • Fever
    • Poor feeding
    • Vomiting
    • Irritability
    • Lethargy
    • Headache
    • Drowsiness
    • Seizures
    • Reduced consciousness
    • Bulging fontanelle (late sign)
  • Classic meningeal signs (comparatively late, less likely in younger children)
    • Photophobia
    • Nuchal rigidity (Other causes: tonsillitis, subarachnoid bleed)
    • Kernig’s sign (Resistance to extending the knee when hip flexed)
    • Brudzinski’s sign (Hips flex on bending head forward)
    • Opisthotonus (arched back)
    • Purpuric rash (meningococcal disease)
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5
Q

Investigations for meningitis

A
  • Lumbar puncture
    • Microbiology
      • Gram stain/culture/virology/antibiotic sensitivity
    • Haematology
      • Cell count and differential (↑ polymorphs, bacterial)
    • Chemistry
      • Glucose (↓ bacterial)
      • Protein (↑)
      • Lactate (↑, more sensitive than glucose)
  • If lumbar puncture contraindicated/partially treated meningitis:
    • Rapid antigen test (blood/urine)
    • PCR
    • Blood culture
    • Throat swab
  • Bloods
    • CRP (↑ viral, ↑↑↑ bacterial)
    • Blood glucose (vs. CSF)
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6
Q

Management of meningitis

A

*Any suspicion of meningococcal disease (febrile, purpuric rash), give IM benzyl-penicillin before hospital admission*

  • Supportive therapy - ABC
    • Secure airway
    • High-flow oxygen
    • Fluid resuscitation (saline, colloids)
    • +/- inotropes (dobutamine)
  • Empirical treatment
    • Ceftriaxone if >3months
    • Cefotaxime/gentamicin + amoxicillin/ampicillin if <3 months
      • If penicillin/cephalosporin-allergic - Chloramphenicol
    • Plus Dexamethasone if >1 month (↓ risk of deafness)
  • If pre-coning signs (↑ ICP) - Mannitol
  • Prophylaxis
    • Rifampicin or Ciprofloxacin
  • Prevention
    • Childhood immunisation programme
      • Meningitis C
      • Haemophilus influenza type b (Hib)
      • Pneumococcal
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