Micro 5 - CNS infections and meningitis Flashcards

1
Q

Causative organisms in

acute
chronic
aseptic

meningitis

A

acute
bacteria

chronic
TB, cryptococcus, spirochetes, syphilis
(immunocompromised)

aseptic
viral

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2
Q

Commonest causative agents of acute meningitis

A

NHS
Neisseria meningitides (gram -ve diplococci, non-haemolytic)
Haemophilus influenzae
Streptococcus pneumoniae (gram +ve diplococci, a haemolytic)

Others
Listeria monocytogenes (gram +ve rod)
E coli
GBS

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3
Q

Key cause of meningoencephalitis

A

listeria monocytogenes

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4
Q

Septicaemia - the clinical spectrum is produced by 4 processes

A

o Capillary leak – hypovolaemia – albumin + other plasma proteins
o Coagulopathy – bleeding + thrombosis – endothelial injury results in platelet release reactions, the protein C pathway + plasma anticoagulants area affected
o Metabolic derangement – acidosis
o Myocardial failure + multi-organ failure

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5
Q

Chronic TB meningitis

Who does it affect
Which parts of the CNS does it affect
MRI
Complications

A

Immunocompromised

Meninges, spinal cord, dilation of ventricles, basal cisterns of brain

Leptomeningeal enhancement on MRI

Tuberculous granuloma
Tuberculous abscess
Cerebritis

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6
Q

Which is the commonest infection of the CNS and how do you treat it

A

Aseptic meningitis

o Self-limiting disease that resolves in 1-2 weeks
o Supportive – analgesics, anti-emetics, antipyretics
o Do not give anti-virals!!

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7
Q

RF for

o Neisseria meningitides
o Streptococcus pneumoniae

A

Both - complement deficiency, hyposplenism (susceptible to encapsulated organisms),

o Neisseria meningitides – hypogammaglobulinemia

o Streptococcus pneumoniae - immune defect (alcoholic), infection (pneumonia), entry through fracture, previous head trauma with CSF leak

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8
Q

Transmission of

meningitis
encephalitis

A

Meningitis
 Person to person transmission from asymptomatic carriers

Encephalitis 
•	Transmission is commonly either person to person or through vectors
o	Mosquitos
o	Lice
o	Ticks
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9
Q

Commonest cause of encephalitis

in the UK
Worldwide

A

UK HSV2

Worldwide arboviruses

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10
Q

CNS infections clinical syndromes

A

Meningitis
Encephalitis
Myelitis (disturbance of nerve transmission e.g. polo)
neurotoxin
e.g. • Clostridium botulinum  botulism  Canned/vacuum packed foods, honey, –> descending paralysis (flaccid)
• Clostridium tetani  tetanus  cut on metal –> spastic paralysis (rigid)

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11
Q

How can a brain abscess develop?

A

o Direct extension (e.g. otitis media, mastoiditis, para-nasal sinuses)
o Occasionally spread haematogenously (e.g. endocarditis)

• Causative organisms (Strep >Staph > gram -ve > other)

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12
Q

CSF

Polymorphs vs

Mononuclear cells

A

Polymorphs = neutrophils = bacterial infection

Mononuclear = lymphocytes = viral/TB

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13
Q

Bacterial, viral, TB meningitis from low to high

WCC

Protein

Glucose

A

WCC
viral –> TB –> bacterial

Protein
Viral –> bacterial –> TB

Glucose
TB + bacterial same –> viral

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14
Q

look at qs on ppt

A

x

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15
Q

Cryptococcus buzzwords

A

Fungal
India ink stain
High opening pressure on LP - pathognomic of cryptococcus
Immunocompromised people e.g. HIV, MSM

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16
Q

TB meningitis buzzwords

A

gram stain shows nothing
chronic headache (causes chronic meningitis)
leptomeningeal enhancement on MRI

Immunocompromised

Meninges, spinal cord, dilation of ventricles, basal cisterns of brain

Tuberculous granuloma
Tuberculous abscess
Cerebritis

can be seen under a microscope (If you can see it under a microscope, it is not a virus (viruses are too small to be seen on a microscope))

(causes chronic meningitis)