Abscesses and other CNS infections Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 7 kinds of primary bacterial infections in the CNS?

A

1) Meningitis
2) Encephalitis
3) Ventriculitis
4) Brain abscess
5) Ventriculoperitoneal shunt and external ventricular drain infection
6) Subdural empyema
7) Eye infections

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2
Q

What is a brain abscess?

A

A focal suppurative (pus forming) process withing the brain parenchyma (pus in the substance of the brain)

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3
Q

Are brain abscesses often polymicrobial or monomicrobial?

A

Polymicrobial (infected with more than one organism)

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4
Q

What bacteria are found in 60-70% of brain abscesses?

A

Streptococci eg. streptococcus milleri (group of pus-forming streptococci)

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5
Q

What bacteria is the most common causes of brain abscess following surgery?

A

Staphylococcus aureus

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6
Q

Other than streptococci and staph aureus which 2 other types of bacteria cause brain abscesses?

A

1) Anaerobes

2) Gram negative enteric bacteria

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7
Q

Give 5 less common causes of brain abscesses?

A

1) Fungi
2) Mycobacterium tuberculosis
3) Toxoplasma gondii
4) Nocardia
5) Actinomyces

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8
Q

In what 4 clinical settings do brain abscesses develop?

A

1) Direct spread for contiguous (sharing common border) suupurative focus - eg. ear, sinuses, teeth
2) Haematogenous spread from a distant focus - eg. endocarditis, bronchiectasis (often multiple abscesses)
3) Trauma - eg. open cranial fracture, post neurosurgery
4) Cryptogenic (unknown origin) - 15-20%

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9
Q

What are the 11 parts of the clinical presentation of brain abscesses?

A

1) Headache (most common)
2) Focal neurological defect (30-50%)
3) Confusion
4) Fever (

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10
Q

What is the mainstay of treatment for a brain abscess?

A

Drainage

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11
Q

For what 5 reasons is it necessary to drain a brain abscess?

A

1) To urgently reduce intracranial pressure
2) To confirm diagnosis
3) To obtain pus for microbiological investigation
4) To enhance efficacy of Abx
5) To avoid spread of infection into the ventricles

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12
Q

Why is treatment of brain abscesses with Abx difficult?

A
  • The physiological properties of the blood-brain barrier and the blood-CSF barrier are distinct
  • Penetration of drugs into the CSF and brain tissue differ
  • Can make it hard to achieve therapeutic concentrations in intracranial pus
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13
Q

What 6 Abx can achieve therapeutic concentrations in intracranial pus?

A

1) Ampicillin
2) Penicillin
3) Cefuroxime
4) Cefotaxime
5) Ceftazidime
6) Metronidazole

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14
Q

What would be the empirical treatment regime for a sinugenic/odontogenic abscess?

A

IV cefotaxime 2g 6-hourly

IV metronidazole 500mg 8-hourly

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15
Q

What would be the empirical treatment for and otogenic abscess?

A

IV benzyl penicillin 2.4g 6-hourly
IV ceftazidime 2g 8-hourly
IV metronidazole 500mg 8-hourly

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16
Q

What are the 2 major complications of a brain abscess?

A

1) Raised intracranial pressure, mass effect, coning

2) Rupture (usually into ventricles) causing ventriculitis

17
Q

What is a subdural empyema?

A

Infection between dura and arachnoid mata

18
Q

Why do the treatment regimes of otogenic and sinugenic/odontogenic abscesses differ?

A

Likely causes by different organisms

19
Q

Are subdural empyemas usually monomicrobial or polymicrobial?

A

Polymicrobial

20
Q

What are the 6 common causes of subdural empyema?

A

1) Anaerobes
2) Streptococci
3) Aerobic gram negative bacilli
4) Streptococcus pneumonia
5) Haemophilus influenza
6) Staphylococcus aureus

21
Q

What are the 5 common pathogenic mechanisms of subdural empyema?

A

1) Spread of infection from sinuses (50-80%)
2) Spread of infection from middle ear
3) Spread of infection from mastoid
4) Spread of infection from distant site (haematogenous spread)
5) Following surgery or trauma

22
Q

What are the 6 possible features of a clinical presentation of subdural empyema?

A

1) Headache
2) Fever
3) Focal neurological defect
4) Confusion
5) Seizure
6) Coma

23
Q

What is the management of subdural empyema?

A
  • Urgent surgical drainage of pus

- Antimicrobial agents (culture of pus guides abx therapy)

24
Q

What is a ventriculoperitoneal shunt (VP shunt), what is it used to treat?

A

Tube from ventricles, through brain parenchym and subcutaneously across the thorax to drain into peritoneal cavity through a series of fenestrations
Free movement of CSF out of ventricles into peritoneum where it is re-absorbed
Permanent tube used to treat for hydrocephalus

25
Q

What is an external ventricular drain (EVD), what is it used for?

A

Drain from the ventricles of the brain through a bore hole to the outside world
Temporary tube used to monitor intracranial pressure

26
Q

Colonisation of VPs and EVDs leads to what infection?

A

Ventriculitis

27
Q

How is ventriculitis diagnosed?

A

CSF microscopy and culture

28
Q

What is the treatment of VP shunt and EVD infection?

A

Removal of device and intraventricular Abx