Meningitis
(Redirected from Fungal meningitis)
Background
- Inflammation of the meninges (membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord)
- Bacterial meningitis is a medical emergency — mortality 15-25% even with treatment; up to 50% untreated[1]
- Time to antibiotics is the most critical intervention — every hour of delay increases mortality
Common Organisms by Age
- Neonates (<1 month): Group B Streptococcus (GBS), E. coli, Listeria monocytogenes
- Infants/Children (1 month - 18 years): Neisseria meningitidis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae type b (less common post-vaccination)
- Adults (18-50): S. pneumoniae (most common), N. meningitidis
- Adults >50, immunocompromised, alcoholics: S. pneumoniae, Listeria, gram-negative bacilli
- Post-neurosurgical/VP shunt: Staphylococcus species, gram-negative bacilli
Viral Meningitis
- Most common cause overall; enterovirus in majority
- Generally self-limited; much better prognosis than bacterial
Clinical Features
- Classic triad (headache, fever, neck stiffness): present in only ~44% of bacterial meningitis
- At least 2 of 4 (headache, fever, neck stiffness, AMS) present in 95%[2]
- Headache (87%), fever (77%), neck stiffness (83%)
- Altered mental status (ranging from confusion to coma)
- Photophobia
- Kernig sign: pain with knee extension when hip is flexed (sensitivity ~5%)
- Brudzinski sign: involuntary hip flexion with passive neck flexion (sensitivity ~5%)
- Jolt accentuation: worsening headache with horizontal head rotation (better sensitivity than Kernig/Brudzinski)
- Petechial/purpuric rash: highly suggestive of N. meningitidis (meningococcemia)
- Neonates: irritability, poor feeding, bulging fontanelle, hypothermia or fever
- Elderly: may present with only confusion without classic features
Differential Diagnosis
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage
- Encephalitis
- Brain abscess
- Subdural hemorrhage / epidural abscess
- Stroke
- Viral meningitis
- Carcinomatous meningitis
- Drug-induced meningitis (NSAIDs, IVIG, TMP-SMX)
Template:Altered mental status and fever DDX
Evaluation
DO NOT DELAY ANTIBIOTICS FOR LP
- If LP will be delayed (CT needed, patient unstable): give antibiotics FIRST, then CT, then LP
- Blood cultures should be drawn before antibiotics when possible (do not delay abx for cultures)
Lumbar Puncture
- CT BEFORE LP only if:
- Immunocompromised, history of CNS disease
- New-onset seizures
- Papilledema
- Focal neurologic deficits
- Altered level of consciousness (GCS <10-12)
- CSF findings:
| Parameter | Bacterial | Viral | TB/Fungal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Opening pressure | Elevated (>20 cm H2O) | Normal/mild ↑ | Elevated |
| WBC | 1000-5000+ (PMN predominant) | 10-500 (lymphocytes) | 50-500 (lymphocytes) |
| Glucose | <40 mg/dL (or CSF:serum <0.4) | Normal | Low |
| Protein | Elevated (>250 mg/dL) | Mild elevation | Elevated |
| Gram stain | Positive in 60-90% | Negative | Negative (AFB rarely +) |
Labs
- Blood cultures (before antibiotics if possible)
- CBC, BMP, lactate, coagulation studies
- Procalcitonin (may help distinguish bacterial from viral; level >0.5 ng/mL supports bacterial)
- CSF studies: cell count with differential, protein, glucose, Gram stain, culture
- Consider: CSF lactate, HSV PCR, cryptococcal antigen, meningitis/encephalitis PCR panel
Management
Empiric Antibiotics (Give IMMEDIATELY if Suspected)
- Adults <50 years:
- Ceftriaxone 2g IV q12h + vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV q8-12h
- Adults >50 years, immunocompromised, or alcoholics:
- Ceftriaxone 2g IV q12h + vancomycin 15-20 mg/kg IV q8-12h + ampicillin 2g IV q4h (Listeria coverage)
- Neonates:
- Ampicillin + gentamicin (or ampicillin + cefotaxime)
- Post-neurosurgical/VP shunt:
- Vancomycin + cefepime (or meropenem)
Dexamethasone
- Dexamethasone 0.15 mg/kg IV q6h x 4 days
- Give with or just before FIRST dose of antibiotics[3]
- Greatest benefit in pneumococcal meningitis (reduced mortality and hearing loss)
- If given >1 hour after antibiotics, benefit is reduced — do not withhold antibiotics for dexamethasone
Viral Meningitis
- Supportive care (analgesia, antiemetics, IV fluids)
- If HSV encephalitis suspected: acyclovir 10 mg/kg IV q8h (do NOT wait for confirmation)
Meningococcal Prophylaxis
- Close contacts of confirmed N. meningitidis require prophylaxis:
- Rifampin 600 mg PO q12h x 2 days OR
- Ciprofloxacin 500 mg PO x 1 dose (preferred for adults) OR
- Ceftriaxone 250 mg IM x 1 dose (preferred for pregnant women)
- Notify public health
Disposition
- Admit all patients with suspected bacterial meningitis to ICU or monitored bed
- Viral meningitis: may discharge if well-appearing, tolerating PO, reliable follow-up
- Repeat LP not routinely needed if clinically improving
See Also
References
- ↑ van de Beek D, et al. Community-acquired bacterial meningitis. Nat Rev Dis Primers. 2016;2:16074. PMID 27808261
- ↑ van de Beek D, et al. Clinical features and prognostic factors in adults with bacterial meningitis. N Engl J Med. 2004;351(18):1849-1859. PMID 15509818
- ↑ de Gans J, van de Beek D. Dexamethasone in adults with bacterial meningitis. N Engl J Med. 2002;347(20):1549-1556. PMID 12432041
- Tunkel AR, et al. Practice guidelines for the management of bacterial meningitis. Clin Infect Dis. 2004;39(9):1267-1284. PMID 15494903
- Brouwer MC, et al. Epidemiology, diagnosis, and antimicrobial treatment of acute bacterial meningitis. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2010;23(3):467-492. PMID 20610819
- McGill F, et al. Acute bacterial meningitis in adults. Lancet. 2016;388(10063):3036-3047. PMID 27265346
