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CNS INFECTION FM Brett MD., FRCPath
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ORGANISMS ORGANISMS ~ PATHOGENIC - cause disease in every individual ~ OPPORTUNISTIC – Affect people with lower resistance
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CNS INFECTION Development and outcome depends on Organism Organism nature route of entry dose Host Host Anatomical defenses - skull, meninges Physiological - immune defense mechanisms
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Bacteria Entry into the cranial cavity Haematogenous - Haematogenous - distant foci e.g lung Local spread - Local spread - Skull - middle ear, nasal sinus, osteomyelitis Abnormal routes Abnormal routes - Trauma -fractures Surgery - shunts Congenital sinus
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BACTERIAL INFECTIONS BACTERIAL INFECTIONS Depending on their virulence/pathogenicity bacteria can induce: 1.Purulent lesions 2.Cellular inflammatory reactions with giant cells 3.Inflammatory oedema caused by toxins and other inflammatory substances released by bacterial secretions or lysis, in the absence of bacterial replication
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PYOGENIC INFECTION PYOGENIC INFECTION 1. BONE – EPIDURAL – usually spinal sec to osteomyelitis 2.DURA MATER - SUB DURAL - sec to sinusitis, otitis etc. 3.ARACHNOID – SUBARACHNOID – sec to haematogenous spread of bacteria 4. PIA - INTRAPARENCHYMAL - abscess
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SUBDURAL
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Three organisms responsible for acute meningitis in childhood or adult life Meningococcus Haemophilus influenza Pneumococcus
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Bacterial meningitis
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Complications of acute meningitis in the neonate in the neonate Obstructive hydrocephalus Cavitating lesions in the white matter
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MeningococcusNasopharynxBlood BacteraemiaSepticaemia ChronicMeningitisEndotoxic shock immune complexes acute meningitisDIC arthritis, vasculitis
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CSF
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Complications of bacterial meningitis Acute inflammation of adjacent structures Organisation of inflammatory structures
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Organisation of inflammatory exudate Impedes flow of CSF into venous sinuses Obstructs CSF outflow from IV ventricle
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A twelve year review of central nervous system bacterial abscesses: presentation and aetiology. Roche M, Humphreys H, Smyth E, Phillips J et al Clin Mic & Inf 2003;9:803-14 1988-2000 163 patients
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Cerebral abscess ~ Mean age – 35.2 ~ P/C – headaches, pyrexia, altered mental state (depends on site, number, and +/- secondary cerebral lesion) ~ Site – frontal lobe commonest ~ Majority – associated with sinusitis, mastoiditis 20% no source ~ Bacteria isolated from 73%. Polymicrobial – 17.7% ~ Anaerobes – 13.6% ~ 9.8% died ~ 11% developed epilepsy
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Cerebral abscess Predisposing conditions Local – otitis media, sinusitis, trauma Systemic ~ chronic lung disease ~ cyanotic congenital heart disease ~ transplants ~ immunosupression
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Parenchymal abscess formation ~ Early cerebritis (days 1-3) ~ Late cerebritis (days 4-9) ~ Early capsule formation (days 10-13) ~ Late capsule formation (days 14 onward)
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AIMS OF TREATMENT ~ Eliminate infectious process ~ Reduce mass effect within cranial cavity – thus reduce secondary injury ~ Treat infections
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Tuberculous meningitis Usually M Tuberculosis More commonly associated with documented history of tuberculosis exposure in children than adults
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CSF
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Syphylis Asymptomatic CNS involvement Syphylitic meningitis – 1-2 yrs meningovascular syphylis – 7yrs parenchymatous neurosyphylis gummatous neurosyphylis
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1 syphylis 1 syphylis – spirochaete dissemination – chancre 2 nd 2 nd – haematogenous dissemination - rash, adenopathy, 3 3 – CVS, CNS, gumma Latent Latent – lasts mths – yrs. Pts may progress straight to the stage of latent syphylis without developing secondary syphylis
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Syphylis I syphylis I syphylis – spirochaete dissemination – chancre 2 nd 2 nd – haematogenous dissemination - rash, adenopathy, 3 3 – CVS, CNS, gumma Latent Latent – lasts mths – yrs. Pts may progress straight to the stage of latent syphylis without developing secondary syphylis
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Neurosarcoidosis ~ Chronic granulomatous disease of unknown aetiology ~ CNS involved in 5%. CNS disease often accompanied by PNS disease ~ Usually base of the brain ~ Facial nerve palsy common. May develop deafness, vertigo, ataxia, DI, hypopituitrism
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Acute viral infections Aseptic meningitis Poliomyelitis Poliomyelitis Herpesvirus - Herpesvirus - HSV, VCZ, EBV, cytomegalo, HHV6 Rubella Rubella Rabies Rabies
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Aseptic meningitis-common causes Echovirus Coxsachie B virus Coxsachie A virus HSV-2 Mumps Measles Adenovirus
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CSF
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Poliomyelitis Precentral gyrus Reticular formation Motor nuclei of pons and medulla Ant horn cells of spinal cord
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HERPESVIRUS INFECTIONS DNA VIRUSES - include HSV1, HSV2, EBV, CMV and HHV6 HSE Encephalitis Focal neurologic signs Mortality 25-50%
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HSE - HSE - oral labial vesicles - retrograde axonal spread – trigeminal ganglion- (latency) Reactivation Reactivation (spontaneously, trauma, UV light, systemic disease) Entry of HSV-1 into CNS – olfactory nerves Reactivation of latent virus in trigeminal nerve Reactivation from temporal lobes
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Chronic viral infections progress over mths - years SSPE SSPE – follows exposure to measles virus Age of onset – 5-15 yrs prognosis poor PML PML - JC virus affects immunosupressed individuals demyelination
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HIV ~ First recognised in USA in 1981 ~ Widely distributed worldwide ~ 30 million currently infected ~ 9000 infections daily - > 50% sub-saharan Africa ~ USA and western Europe – homosexual, and IVDA ~ Elsewhere heterosexual ~ Small proportion perinatal or breast feeding ~ Organ donors, blood etc
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HIV – retrovirus ~ Infects cells carrying CD4 antigen i.e CD4+ T helper cells and monocytes/macrophages ~ This leads to a) cell mediated immunodeficiency – AIDS b) invasion of CNS by macrophage/monocytes ~ CNS disease – infection by virus - opportunistic infections - Lymphomas - HIV asssociated systemic disease affecting CNS e.g metabolic, cvs etc. - complications of treatment
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Commonest processes identified prior to HAART ~ Cryptococcus ~ Toxoplasmosis ~ PML ~ HIVE ~ HIVL ~ Cytomegalovirus infection ~ Vacuolar myelopathy ~ CNS Lymphoma By and large did not have bacterial infections
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Commonest causes of a cerebral mass in a patient with HIV Toxoplasmosis CNS lymphoma Tuberculoma PML CMV Lesion not related to HIV - glioma
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Toxoplasma cyst Toxoplasma ICC
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Introduction of HAART (1995-96) dramatically improved The course and prognosis of HIV infection Restored functional immune system – so less opportunistic infection Dramatic reduction in cerebral toxoplasmosis, CMV encephalitis and HIV encephalitis Unchanged incidence of PML and NHL
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