- Tuberculous meningitis
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eMedicineSubj = neuro
eMedicineTopic = 385
MeshID = D014390Tuberculous meningitis is also known as TB meningitis or tubercular meningitis.
Tuberculous
meningitis is "Mycobacterium tuberculosis " infection of themeninges —the system of membranes which envelops thecentral nervous system . It is the most common form of CNStuberculosis .Clinical features
Fever andheadache are the cardinal features.Confusion is a late feature andcoma bears a poor prognosis.Meningism is absent in a fifth of patients with TB meningitis. Patients may also have focal neurological deficits.Pathology
Mycobacterium tuberculosis of the meninges is the cardinal feature and the inflammation is concentrated towards the base of the brain. Infection begins in the lungs and may spread to the meninges by a variety of routes.
Blood-borne spread certainly occurs and 25% of patients with
miliary TB have TB meningitis, presumably by crossing theblood-brain barrier [cite journal | title="Mycobacterium tuberculosis" invasion and traversal across an invitro human blood-brain barrier as a pathogenic mechanism for central nervous system tuberculosis | author=Jain SK, Paul-Satyaseela M, Lamichhane G, "et al." | journal=J. Infect. Dis. | year=2006 | volume=193 | issue=9 | pages=1287–95 | doi=10.1086/502631 |month=May |pmid=1658636] ; but a proportion of patients may get TB meningitis from rupture of a cortical focus in the brain (a so-calledRich focus ); an even smaller proportion get it from rupture of a bony focus in the spine. It is rare and unusual for TB of the spine to cause TB of thecentral nervous system , but isolated cases have been described.Diagnosis
Diagnosis of TB meningitis is made by analysing CSF collected by
lumbar puncture . When collecting CSF for suspected TB meningitis, a minimum of 1ml of fluid should be taken (preferably 5 to 10ml).The CSF usually has a high protein, low glucose and a raised number of lymphocytes.
Acid-fast bacilli are sometimes seen on a CSF smear, but more commonly, "M. tuberculosis" is grown in culture. A spiderweb clot in the collected CSF is characteristic of TB meningitis, but is a rare finding.More than half of cases of TB meningitis cannot be confirmed microbiologically, and these patients are treated on the basis of clinical suspicion only. The culture of TB from CSF takes a minimum of two weeks, and therefore the majority of patients with TB meningitis are started on treatment before the diagnosis is confirmed.
Nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT)
This is a heterogeneous group of tests that use
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect mycobacterial nucleic acid. These test vary in which nucleic acid sequence they detect and vary in their accuracy. The two most common commercially available tests are the amplified mycobacterium tuberculosis direct test (MTD, Gen-Probe) and Amplicor. In 2007, a systematic review of NAAT by the NHS Health Technology Assessment Programme concluded that for diagnosing tuberculous meningitis "Individually, the AMTD test appears to perform the best (sensitivity 74% and specificity 98%) [page 87] " cite journal |author=Dinnes J, Deeks J, Kunst H, Gibson A, Cummins E, Waugh N, Drobniewski F, Lalvani A |title=A systematic review of rapid diagnostic tests for the detection of tuberculosis infection |journal=Health Technol Assess |volume=11 |issue=3 |pages=1–314 |year=2007 |pmid=17266837 | url = http://www.hta.nhsweb.nhs.uk/project/1247.asp. In the NHSmeta-analysis , they found the pooled prevalence of TB meningitis to be 29% [page 85] ; however there was much heterogeneity in the reported sensitivities. Using a [http://medinformatics.uthscsa.edu/calculator/ clinical calculator] , these numbers yield apositive predictive value of 94% and anegative predictive value of 90%; however the 30% prevalence may be high due to referral bias. Alternate estimates of disease prevalence can be entered into the [http://medinformatics.uthscsa.edu/calculator/ clinical calculator] to refine the predictive values.Imaging
Imaging studies such as CT or MRI may show features strongly suggestive of TB meningitis, but cannot diagnose it.
Treatment
"See:
tuberculosis treatment "The treatment of TB meningitis is
isoniazid ,rifampicin ,pyrazinamide andethambutol for two months, followed by isoniazid and rifampicin alone for a further ten months. Steroids are always used in the first six weeks of treatment (and sometimes for longer). A few patients may require immunomodulatory agents such asthalidomide .Treatment must be started as soon as there is a reasonable suspicion of the diagnosis. Treatment must not be delayed while waiting for confirmation of the diagnosis.
Hydrocephalus occurs as a complication in about a third of patients with TB meningitis and will require aventricular shunt .References
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