Meningitis Flashcards
What is it?
Inflammation of the Meninges surrounding the brain and spinal cord
What causes it?
Can be infection by bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites, and can also have non-infective causes
What bacteria cause meningitis? (4)
Strep Pneumoniae, Group B Strep, N Meningitidis, H Influenzae
What Viruses cause meningitis? (4)
HSV, Measles, Influenza, Coxsackie
What are the non-infective causes? (2)
Malignant cells e.g Leukaemia/lymphoma, Toxins e.g Intrathecal drugs, NSAIDs, Trimethoprim, SLE
Is meningitis common?
There are 3200 cases of bacterial Meningitis in the UK each year
Who does it affect?
It can affect all age groups but is more common in infants and the elderly
What is the most common cause?
Viral Meningitis
What prophylaxis is there?
Vaccines are given against bacterial meningitis types: A, C, W, Y, Group B H. Influenza, Pneumococcus
Risk Factors (10)
CSF shunts, dural abnormalities, Spinal Procedures, Endocarditis, Diabetes, Alcoholism, Cirrhosis, Splenectomy, Sickle Cell, Crowding e.g University Students
Symptoms (5)
Headache, leg pains, stiff neck, photophobia, seizures
Signs (12)
Cold peripheries, abnormal skin colour, pain/resistance on passive knee extension, reduced conscious level, Opathotonus (arching of the body), Petechial rash, slow cap refill, Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation, Hypotension, Tachycardia, Pyrexia, Low urine output (signs of sepsis)
Differentials (4)
Encephalitis, Subarachnoid Haemorrhage, Sepsis from elsewhere, Tetanus
What bloods would you do? (8)
FBC, U&E, ESR, CRP, Coagulation Screen, Blood Cultures, LFTs, Glucose
Other investigations (3)
CT, CXR, Lumbar Puncture with CSF Microscopy, culture and sensitivities