Differential Diagnosis
Infectious
Viral
Enterovirus EV-B species (includes Group B coxsackieviruses and echoviruses) are the most common cause of aseptic meningitis in both children and adults
CV-B2 to CV-B5, E-6, E-6, E-9, E-11, E-13, E-16, E-18, E-30, and E-33
Herpes (especially HSV-2, as primary infection)
Varicella
Mumps (encephalitis), measles (acute encephalitis)
Arboviruses
Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV)
Acute HIV
EBV , influenza , Colorado tick virus , rabies
Bacterial
Mycobacterial
Fungal
Non-infectious
Autoimmune or inflammatory
Drug-induced meningitis
Malignancy
Investigations
Enterovirus
Usually positive PCR of CSF
Can look for enterovirus in stool, nasopharyngeal, and throat, as well as conjunctiva if there is conjunctivitis
Persists in stool for several weeks, but less specific
NP preferred over throat
Parechovirus PCR if very young child or immunocompromised
West Nile virus IgM/IgG/PCR from CSF and blood
Syphilis screening EIA
HIV screen