Meningitis Flashcards
1
Q
Definition of Meningitis:
A
- Inflammation of the meninges
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
- Neonates
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)
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)
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)
- Microbiology
- 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)
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
- Childhood immunisation programme