Encephalitis: Difference between revisions
From IDWiki
(→) |
(→) |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
***[[Herpes simplex encephalitis|Herpes simplex virus]] |
***[[Herpes simplex encephalitis|Herpes simplex virus]] |
||
***[[Varicella-zoster virus]] |
***[[Varicella-zoster virus]] |
||
***[[Enteroviruses]] |
***[[Enterovirus|Enteroviruses]] |
||
***[[Eastern equine encephalitis|Eastern]] or [[Western equine encephalitis]], [[Japanese encephalitis]], [[Murray Valley encephalitis]], [[St. Louis encephalitis]], [[West Nile virus]] |
***[[Eastern equine encephalitis virus|Eastern]] or [[Western equine encephalitis virus]], [[Japanese encephalitis virus]], [[Murray Valley encephalitis virus]], [[St. Louis encephalitis virus]], [[West Nile virus]] |
||
***[[Rabies virus]] |
***[[Rabies virus]] |
||
***[[Hendra virus]] |
***[[Hendra virus]] |
||
***[[Nipah virus]] |
***[[Nipah virus]] |
||
***[[Tickborne encephalitis]], [[La Crosse virus]], [[Powassan virus]] |
***[[Tickborne encephalitis virus]], [[La Crosse virus]], [[Powassan virus]] |
||
**Bacteria |
**Bacteria |
||
***''[[Mycoplasma pneumoniae]]'' |
***''[[Mycoplasma pneumoniae]]'' |
Revision as of 11:08, 18 August 2020
- Infection of the brain parenchyma causing clouding of the sensorium
- Some overlap with meningitis
Differential Diagnosis
- Common causes include HSV, VZV, and enterovirus in developed countries
- Consider rabies virus, Japanese encephalitis virus, West Nile virus, tickborne encephalitis virus, and St. Louis encephalitis virus depending on travel history
- Infectious
- Viruses
- Herpes simplex virus
- Varicella-zoster virus
- Enteroviruses
- Eastern or Western equine encephalitis virus, Japanese encephalitis virus, Murray Valley encephalitis virus, St. Louis encephalitis virus, West Nile virus
- Rabies virus
- Hendra virus
- Nipah virus
- Tickborne encephalitis virus, La Crosse virus, Powassan virus
- Bacteria
- Other
- Viruses
- Non-infectious (including post-infectious)
- Cryptogenic in 50-70%
Investigations
- Lumbar puncture for viral culture or PCR
- MRI is the best neuroimaging; CT if MRI not available
- EEG is rarely helpful except to rule out non-convulsive status epilepticus
MRI
Management
- Empiric acyclovir 10 mg/kg IV q8h for suspected HSV or VZV encephalitis
- Add doxycycline if rickettsiosis or ehrlichiosis is possible