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What is the normal composition of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)?
See Table 25-1 .
Opening Pressure | WBC | RBC | Protein | Glucose |
---|---|---|---|---|
8-15 mm Hg or 100-180 mm H 2 O | 0-5/mm 3 | 0/mm 3 | 15-45 mg/dL | 45-80 mg/dL |
List common contraindications to performing a lumbar puncture.
Infection: cellulitis, abscess
Space-occupying lesion
Uncal, central, transtentorial, or cerebellar herniation
Coagulopathy: thrombocytopenia, liver failure, anticoagulant use
List the major complications of a lumbar puncture.
Headache
CSF leak
Infection
Bleeding
Rarely herniation
Describe the basic technique involved in performing a lumbar puncture.
Obtain computed tomography/magnetic resonance imaging (CT/MRI) brain indicated for patients with papilledema, altered mental status, focal neurologic deficit, new-onset seizure, or immunocompromised state.
Ensure that platelet count is >50,000, and international normalized ratio is <1.5.
Place patient in lateral decubitus position, with knees and neck flexed.
Ensure patient’s back is as close to edge of bed as possible.
Palpate top of iliac crest and then place thumb of same hand in the interspace forming a vertical line with the top of the iliac crest.
The identified location indicates the L3-L4 space. The needle can be placed into the L3-L4, L4-L5, or L5-S1 interspaces.
Avoid L2-L3 interspace and higher since the conus medullaris terminates at L1-L2.
Insert needle, with the bevel parallel to longitudinal fibers of the supraspinous ligament.
Advance needle, and a “pop” should be felt, indicating the piercing of the needle through the supraspinous ligament. Advance needle into the subarachnoid space.
Describe the typical composition of CSF by type of infectious agent.
See Table 25-2 .
Opening Pressure | WBC | Protein | Glucose | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bacterial | Elevated | >1000/mm 3 PMN predominance |
>120 mg/dL | <30 mg/dL |
Viral | Normal | <100/mm 3 Lymphocytic predominance |
Normal-elevated | Normal |
Fungal | Normal-slightly elevated | 20-500/mm 3 Lymphocytic predominance |
Elevated | Decreased |
Tuberculosis | Elevated | 10-500/mm 3 Lymphocytic predominance |
100-500 mg/dL | 35-40 mg/dL |
Syphilis | Increased | Mononuclear predominance | Elevated | Normal |
Lyme disease | Normal | Lymphocytic predominance | Increased | Normal |
Roos KL (ed): Principles of neurologic infectious diseases: principles and practice . New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004.
Name the common pathogens causing bacterial meningitis by population group, and indicate the typical empiric therapy for these bacterial pathogens.
See Table 25-3 .
Population Group | Common Pathogens | Empiric Therapy |
---|---|---|
Newborns | Gram negative: Escherichia coli , Klebsiella , Enterobacter , Proteus group B streptococci: Streptococcus agalactiae | Cefotaxime + Ampicillin |
Infants and children | Neisseria meningitidis , Streptococcus pneumoniae , Hemophilus influenzae | Ceftriaxone or cefotaxime plus vancomycin |
Healthy, immunocompetent | N. meningitidis , S. pneumoniae , Listeria monocytogenes | Third/fourth-generation cephalosporin plus ampicillin plus vancomycin |
Nosocomial/postneurosurgical | Gram-negative Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa , staphylococci | Meropenem plus vancomycin |
Ventriculitis | Staphylococcus epidermidis , Staphylococcus aureus , gram-negative Enterobacteriaceae, P. aeruginosa | Meropenem plus vancomycin |
Elderly | L. monocytogenes , gram-negative Enterobacteriaceae, P. aeruginosa , pneumococci | Third/fourth-generation cephalosporin plus ampicillin plus vancomycin |
When is chemoprophylaxis for meningococcal meningitis appropriate, and what antimicrobials can be used?
Every person sleeping in the same house and those contacts engaging in saliva exchanging oropharyngeal secretions should undergo chemoprophylaxis.
Rifampin: adults, infants
Ciprofloxacin: adults
Ceftriaxone: adults, children
What is the role of adjunctive corticosteroids in the treatment of bacterial meningitis?
The benefits of intravenous corticosteroids in bacterial meningitis come from the reduction of the inflammatory process that leads to significant morbidity and mortality. Corticosteroids are thought to help decrease intracranial pressure (ICP) and reduce brain edema and meningeal inflammation. In children, corticosteroids have been shown to reduce the incidence of sensorineural hearing loss. Studies in adults showed protection in patients with Streptococcus pneumoniae meningitis. Treatment showed association with significant reduction in unfavorable outcome and mortality. The dosing regimen is dexamethasone 4 mg intravenously every 6 hours for 4 days with the first dose given 30 minutes prior to the first dose of antibiotics. If the CSF cultures indicate the pathogen is not S. pneumoniae , the dexamethasone may be discontinued.
Describe the pathogenesis, common clinical findings, diagnostic approach, neuroimaging findings, and complications of bacterial meningitis.
See Table 25-4 .
Pathogenesis | Bacteria enter subarachnoid space → replication and autolysis → release of bacterial components in CSF → release of proinflammatory host factors |
Clinical findings | Stiff neck, headache, fever, photophobia, malaise, vomiting, lethargy → deterioration of level of consciousness |
Diagnosis | Lumbar puncture: elevated opening pressure, polymorphonuclear leukocytic pleocytosis, elevated protein, low glucose, and elevated lactate in postneurosurgical patients, gram-stained smear, CSF culture Blood cultures, CRP/ESR |
CT/MRI findings | Cerebral edema, hydrocephalus, ventriculitis, vasculitis, septic embolism, sinus venous thrombus causing infarction, intracranial free air due to dural leak |
Complications | Death with highest mortality in pneumococcal and Listeria meningitis Sensorineural hearing loss Hemiparesis, epileptic seizures, hemianopia, ataxia, cranial nerve palsies |
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