Meningitis
- Infants with meningitis often present with nonspecific findings of:
- fever, poor feeding, lethargy (or decreased interaction with caregivers), vomiting, irritability, +/- a rash
- inconsolable crying, prolonged or worsening irritability, or progressive lethargy are also important clinical features that may indicate a CNS infection such as meningitis
- nuchal rigidity is uncommon in infants
- Older children are more likely to have specific symptoms related to meningitis, such as:
- fever
- stiff neck
- altered mental status
- headache
NB: Absence of stiff neck does not rule out meningitis in any age group, particularly those < 2 years old.
Management
- Blood culture recommended.
- Droplet/contact precautions recommended for 24 hours.
- Indications for CT before LP:
- focal neurological deficit
- papilledema
- GCS < 11 or decrease in score of 3 or more
- recent seizure without recovery to baseline mental status
- Lumbar puncture (LP) for cell count, glucose, protein, Gram stain and culture recommended prior to antibiotic therapy unless:
- uncorrected coagulopathy
- hemodynamically unstable
- extensive or spreading purpura
NB: Do not delay dexamethasone and antibiotics when clinical suspicion of meningitis is high if neuroimaging (CT/MRI) and/or LP cannot be performed expediently.
- Bacterial antigen test (latex agglutination) of CSF not recommended.
- Repeat LP should be considered if:
- patient not responding clinically after 48h of appropriate antibiotic therapy
S. pneumoniae and patient received dexamethasone or has penicillin and/or cephalosporin intermediate/resistant S. pneumoniae, especially if clinical improvement has not occurred
- Consider CT/MRI of brain to rule out subdural empyema if slow to improve or focal neurologic signs or new or persistent fever as this will require a longer course of antibiotics +/- surgical drainage.
- For prophylaxis of H. influenzae and N. meningitidis in close contacts, see Prophylaxis for Contacts of Communicable Diseases.
Dexamethasone Therapy in Meningitis
- Corticosteroids are not recommended in neonatal meningitis.
- Corticosteroids are an option in bacterial meningitis in infants and children ≥ 6 weeks of age.
- Dexamethasone 0.15mg/kg (maximum 10mg/dose) IV q6h. Give 15-20 minutes before, or with, the first dose of antibiotics. Dexamethasone can be given up to 4 hours (UK guidelines up to 12h) after administration of antibiotics.
- if S. pneumoniae or H. influenzae or no pathogen identified, continue dexamethasone for 4 days.
- if pathogen not S. pneumoniae or H. influenzae, discontinue dexamethasone.
- If Listeria monocytogenes, discontinue dexamethasone immediately as associated with increased mortality.
- Empiric vancomycin is not routinely indicated for:
- sepsis without meningitis
- viral meningitis
- neonatal meningitis
NB: Vancomycin has slow distribution and poor CSF penetration. It should be given as soon as possible AFTER the first dose of cefotaxime/ceftriaxone, and continued ONLY if the C&S results indicate cefotaxime/ceftriaxone resistant S. pneumoniae. Maintain trough vancomycin serum concentration of 10-20mg/L.
Audiology Assessment
Formal audiology assessment should be performed prior to discharge to optimize management if hearing loss has occurred.