Neuro Infections
Neuro Infections
Neuro Infections
Infectious diseases
of the nervous system
1. Meningitises
2. Encephalitises
3. Meningoencephalitises
4. Cerebral arachnoiditis
5. Infectious lesions of the dura mater
epidural abscess
subdural empyema
6. Brain abscesses
Neuroinfections
The meninges
Neuroinfections
2. By pathogenesis:
primary
secondary
3. On localization:
generalized
limited
basal
convexital
Neuroinfections
Meningitises
PURULENT SEROUS
Diagnostics
Making punctures
And taking CSF
Neuroinfections
Neuroinfections
Neuroinfections
Meningeal syndrome
1. Common infectious symptoms
2. Brain-wide symptoms
3. Meningeal symptoms
stiff neck
Kernig’ sign
Brudzinsky’ signs (upper, middle, lower)
Zygomatic Bekchterev’ sign
4. CSF changes
increased liquor pressure
cell-protein dissociation
Neuroinfections
Meningeal symptoms
Nuchal rigidity
Kernig’s sign
Neuroinfections
Meningococcal meningitis
• air-drop transmission
• path the source is sick or healthy
carrier sporadic nature of the disease,rarely
a small epidemic occurs at any age
Neisseria
meningitidis
Neuroinfections
BACTERIAL MENINGITIS
Pathogenesis
Bacteria typically gain access to the central
nervous system by colonizing the mucous
membranes of the nasopharynx, leading to local
tissue invasion, bacteremia, and hematogenous
seeding of the subarachnoid space.
Bacteria can also spread to the meninges directly,
through anatomic defects in the skull or from
parameningeal sites such as the paranasal
sinuses or middle ear.
Neuroinfections
BACTERIAL MENINGITIS
Pathogenesis
Polysaccharide bacterial capsules,
lipopolysaccharides, and outer membrane
proteins may contribute to the bacterial invasion
and virulence.
The low levels of antibody and complement
present in the subarachnoid space are inadequate
to contain the infection.
The resulting inflammatory response is associated
with the release of inflammatory cytokines, that
promote blood-brain barrier permeability,
vasogenic cerebral edema, changes in cerebral
blood flow, and perhaps direct neuronal toxicity.
Neuroinfections
Meningococcal meningitis
Pathogenesis
entrance gate-upper respiratory tract
nasopharyngitis
Hemorrhagic rashes
Neuroinfections
Meningococcal meningitis
Pathomorphology
The web and soft shells are hyperemic and
edematous. Accumulation of pus in the subarachnoid
space. Small hemorrhages in the brain substance
Neuroinfections
Antibacterial treatment
of the acute purulent meningitis
Start-therapy of the meningitis unknown etiology
•Aminoglycosides (Kanamycin, Gentamicin) 2-4 mg / kg / day
•Penicillin + Gentamicin + Kanamycin
•Ampicillin (50-100 mg / kg / day in 2 doses) + Gentamicin or
Kanamycin
•Cefotaxime (Ceftriaxone) + Ampicillin; Benzylpenicillin;
Chloramphenicol
Antibacterial treatment
of the acute purulent meningitis
Chronic meningitis
They develop in chronic infections: tuberculosis,
brucellosis, syphilis, leptospirosis, AIDS, parasitic
lesions (cysticercosis), etc.
Tuberculous meningitis
• Develops in patients with hematogenically
disseminated forms of tuberculosis
Infection hematogenous route through the
choroid plexus of the ventricles
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis
Neuroinfections
Tuberculous meningitis
Pathomorphology
Tuberculous tubercles on the
base of the brain
The shells are dim
Fibrous effusion in the sub-
spider space
The ventricles of the brain
are stretched
Neuroinfections
Tuberculous meningitis
Clinic and diagnostics
• The disease develops slowly
• First appear malaise, decreased appetite, daytime
drowsiness, subfebrility, headache, vomiting, m. b.
mental disorders
Meningeal syndrome develops in 2-3 weeksLater,
there are symptoms of CHN damage: oculomotor,
facial, etc.
CSF: transparent, pleocytosis 100-300cells in 1
mm3 (mainly lymphocytic), significantly increased
protein content –up to 1-5 g / l,
Reduced glucose level
Lethality 10%
Neuroinfections
Isoniazid 5-10 mg / kg
Rifampicin 600 mg 1 R / day
Pyrazinamide 20-35 mg / kg
Contact abscesses
Causes: mastoiditis, otitis, purulent processes in the
bones of the skull, paranasal sinuses, eye socket,
meninges, oral cavity (phlegmon of the bottom of
the mouth)
Otogenic (50%)
Rhinogenic
Odontogenic
Orbitalnye
Otogenic abscesses
The infection penetrates from the temporal bone
through the roof of the tympanic cavity and cavernous
Metastatic abscesses
Reasons:
Traumatic abscesses
• More often develop with open TBI
• When TMO is damaged, the infection enters the
perivascular slits in the brain tissue, which is
preceded by limited or diffuse inflammation of the
membranes
• If a foreign body gets in, the infection spreads with it
• The abscess spreads along the course of the wound
channel or around a foreign body
• Traumatic abscesses account for about 15% of all
brain abscesses
Neuroinfections
• Clinical examination
• CSF research
• CT or radionuclide scintigraphy (formation of a
round
shape with a clear shape and a pronounced zone of
perifocal edema)
Differential diagnosis:
• Meningitis
• Neoplastic diseases of the brain
Neuroinfections
Encephalitis-inflammation
of the brain substance
• Primary
• Secondary post-or para-infectious
(about 50%)
Caused by slow infections
Neuroinfections
Classification of encephalitis
I. Primary Encephalitis
1. Viral
Arboviral
- tick-borne spring and summer
- mosquito Japanese
- American St. Louis
Viral polyseasone
- enterovirus ECHO and Coxsackie
- herpetic
- with rabies
- retroviral (AIDS, HTLV-1 myelopathy, etc.)
Caused by an unknown virus
- epidemic (Economo)
Classification of encephalitis
II. Encephalitis secondary
1. Viral
- for measles
- for chickenpox
- for rubella
- papovavirus (progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy),
cytomegalovirus, encephalitis in neuro-AIDS
2. Post-vaccination
3. Microbial and rickettsial
- staphylococcal
- streptococcal
- malarial
- toxoplasmosis
III. Encephalitis caused by slow infections
1. Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
2. Prion diseases (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, Kuru disease, etc.)
Neuroinfections
Encephalitic syndrome
Herpetic encephalitis
• One of the most common encephalitis
• The causative agent is the herpes simplex virus type I
• It develops during primary infection or against the
background of reactivation of a persistent virus in the
body
Clinic
Develops acutely: fever, non-focal neurological
symptoms, epileptic seizures, meningeal signs,
olfactory hallucinations
• Within a few days a coma develops
• Death rate at 70%
Neuroinfections
Herpetic encephalitis
Pathomorphology
Morphological changes are found in the medial parts of
the temporal and frontal lobes, due to the spread of the
virus along the olfactory pathways (from the olfactory
bulbs) or perineurally along the branches of the trigeminal
nerve (from the Gasser node)
Detected by the acute hemorrhagic necrosis of the brain
tissue with lymphocytic infiltration
Neuroinfections
Herpetic encephalitis
Diagnostics
There are no absolute diagnostic criteria.
• Clinical examination
• CT (MRI)
• Serological examination of CSF and blood: increase in
the titer of antibodies to the virus by 10-12 days (which
Treatment
Start immediately in all cases suspected of herpetic
encephalitis.
• Acyclovir at a dose of 10 mg / kg in / in drip 3 R / day.
10-12 days
• To combat cerebral edema, treatment of epileptic
seizures
Neuroinfections
Herpetic encephalitis
Neuroinfections
Clinical forms
• Classic
• Meningeal
• Feverish
• Polyradiculoneuritis
Neuroinfections
days
Serum immunoglobulin from plasma of donors living in
endemic areas
Ribonuclease 30 mg after 4 h / m 5 days
Detoxification, decongestant therapy
In the recovery period-medical and social rehabilitation
Prevention
• For endemic indications-tissue vaccination
by inactivated vaccine 1 ml n / a 3 times in autumn and
Chronic encephalitis
Currently, most researchers attribute chronic
inflammatory diseases of the brain to the slow
neuroinfections.
1)Viral infections:
• Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
• Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
local symptoms
• General brain symptoms: headache, nausea, vomiting,
non systemic dizziness, memory loss, irritability, fatigue,
Neuroinfections
Convexital arachnoiditis:
symptoms of irritation predominate
partial seizures of epilepsy are characteristic
Basal arachnoiditis:
• non-focal neurological symptoms
Optico-chiasmal arachnoiditis:
develops 2-3 weeks after the flu
• there is a "grid" in front of the eyes, vision decreases,
there is a scotoma, a concentric decrease in vision
• develops neuropathy of the optic nerves
• sometimes-hypothalamic disorders, reduced sense of
smell
Neuroinfections
Arachnoiditis. Treatment.
A long-term course of treatment with the use of resorbing,
normalizing ICP, improving cerebral circulation and
metabolism of drugs is shown.
• Biogenic stimulants
• Iodide preparations (biyohinol, potassium iodide)
• Lydasum
• Pyrogenalum
• When increasing ICP-diacarb, glycerol
• For convulsive syndrome - anticonvulsants
• Nootropics, vasoactive drugs
• In the development of occlusive hydrocephalus-surgical
treatment (bypass surgery)
The life prognosis is favorable, for health - worse with
frequent relapses.
Neuroinfections
Neurosyphilis
Marvel at the different structures of the NS
• The damage is related to the implementation
Tr. pallidum and immune disorders
• Currently more often
there are vasculitis, meningitis,
less often-progressive paralysis
Tr. pallidum
Pathomorphology
In the early stages of the disease, meningitis often develops
with lymphoid infiltration of the membranes and damage to the
endothelium of the brain vessels
• In the chronic stages, similar changes occur occur in
the cortex: infiltration and atrophy in combination with
the proliferation of glial elements
• In the spinal cord in chronic courseneurosyphilis is
followed by the phase of inflammationdegeneration of
the posterior roots and posterior ropes
Neuroinfections
Neurosyphilis
Clinical forms
1) Asymptomatic neurosyphilis
specific changes are found only in the CSF
2) Syphilitic meningitis
develops within a year after infection
acute or subacute serous meningitis
3) Endarteritis of the brain vessels
secondary focal symptoms
Neurosyphilis
Clinical forms
5) Dorsal drywall (Tabes dorsalis)
it develops when the membranes of the spinal cord are
affected and proceeds with the spread of
inflammatory-dystrophic changes to the posterior
ropes and roots
piercing pain in the legs, ataxia
6) Progressive paralysis
• develops as a result of chronic specific meningo
encephalitis's
• the clinic is diverse: dementia dominates with first the
critique, then the paralysis and epileptic attacks
Neuroinfections
Neurosyphilis. Diagnostics.
• CSF-lymphocytic pleocytosis (200-300 CL per1 mm3)
• Wassermann reaction
• RIF
• RIBT
Treatment
• Penicillin 200,000 DB every 3 hours V/m (course dose
40 000 000 Units)
• Within 2-4 weeks, potassium iodide is prescribed,
then the preparations of bismuth biyohinol,
bismoverol
Courses of antibiotic therapy and heavy metal salts
spend with a break of 1-2 months
• Symptomatic therapy
Neuroinfections
"AIDS-dementia”
• The reason is multi-point giant cell encephalitis
and progressive diffuse leukoencephalopathy
• In the debut-complaints of drowsiness, impaired
attention, memory loss
• Then there is an increase in muscle tone,
sucking and grasping reflexes, adiadohokinesis,
apathy, indifference to the state, bradykinesia,
tremor
• In the advanced stage, against the background
of dementia, there is mutism, paraplegia,
violation of pelvic functions
Sensory polyneuropathy
• It is manifested by pain and paresthesia in the
legs, loss of knee reflexes
Neuroinfections
Neuroborreliosis
This is infectious multisystem disease, preeminentit
affects the skin, nervous system, joints and heart, causingmy
spirochete and transmitted to humans by the bite of Ixodes
ticks.
Incubationthe period is from 3 to 32 days.
The first stage is characterized by migrating ring
shaped erythema. Against the background of pathogen
dissemination increased headache, weakness, malaise,
muscle pain, sore throat, sometimes multiple
secondary
erythema and generalized lymphadenopathy.
• For the second stage of neuroborreliosis, a triad of
syndromes is typical: serous meningitis, cranial
neuropathy, multiple painful sciaticaTIA
(meningoradiculitis).
In the third stage, the defeat of the nervous system is
characterized by multiple encephalomyelitis syndrome,
Neuroinfections
Neuroborreliosis
Diagnostics
Diagnosis of neuroborreliosis is based on
anamnesis data, clinical picture, detection of
antibodies in blood serum and CSF sometimes-
determination of Borrelia in the CSF.
Treatment
It involves the administration of antibiotics
(penicillin, doxycycline, amoxicillin, cefuroxime,
cephalosporins of the third generation) for 2-4 weeks,
depending on the stage of the disease
When pain syndrome requires the appointment
of NSAID