Title: ferne
1A Diabetic Male with AMS, Fever, and
Hallucinations
2Edward P. Sloan, MD, MPHAssociate
ProfessorDepartment of Emergency
MedicineUniversity of Illinois College of
MedicineChicago, IL
3Attending PhysicianEmergency MedicineUniversity
of Illinois HospitalOur Lady of the
Resurrection HospitalChicago, IL
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6Global Objectives
- Maximize patient outcome
- Utilize health care resources well
- Optimize evidence-based medicine
- Enhance ED practice
7Sessions Objectives
- Present case
- Review key concepts
- Consider relevant questions
- Examine treatment options
- Develop reasonable Rx strategies
8EMS Presentation
- 51 year old 0028 CFD EMS call for AMS
- Per family, high temp, flu-like symptoms
- Fever and hallucinations
- Hot, flushed, diaphoretic, O x 1
- VS 140/P, HR 120, RR 30
- Glucose 300
- Hx DM, HTN
- Recent viral illness
9ED Presentation
- August 2002, Illinois, 101 AM
- ED Presentation non-verbal, moaning
- Temp 102.2
- Responds to verbal, moans Help me.
10ED History
- Viral Sx, N/V/D for 2 days
- Taking NSAIDs, refused PMD admit
- No drugs or EtOH history
- Hx psoriasis
11ED Physical Exam
- Agitated, confused, combative, diaphoretic
- Pupils 2-3 mm, non-reactive airway OK
- Neck supple, no thyromegaly
- Cardiopulmonary tachycardia, tachypnea
- Abdomen non-tender
- Neuro CN grossly normal, no motor
- weakness, tremor, intermittent nystagmus
- on central gaze
- Skin old psoriasis, no new rash
12Clinical Questions
- What are the differential diagnoses?
- What are the etiologies?
- What tests must be performed?
- What therapies must be provided?
- What consultations are required?
- What outcome is likely?
13ED Management
- DDx Viral Sx, AMS
- R/o encephalitis, meningitis, sepsis
- Need to R/o West Nile Virus (Illinois)
- 115 Haldol, ativan
- 125 RSI with etomidate, pavulon, sux
- 440 Ceftriaxone 2 gr IV
- 455 Acyclovir 1 gr IV over 1 hour
14ED Diagnostics
- WBC 11,900 Hb 16.1
- Glu 313, Bicarb 25, chem ok
- 7.33 / 39 / 79 / 22 / 97
- CXR no clear infiltrate
- EKG sinus tach
- UA no UTI
- CT no lesions
- LP Unable x 2
15Consultations
- Neuro consult LP under fluoro, EEG
- ID consult
- R/o septic shock, resp failure
- R/o staph, given psoriasis
- R/o pneumococcal pneumonia
- R/o meningitis
- R/o toxic or metabolic
- encephalopathy
- Add vancomycin, obtain 2-D echo
16Hospital Course
- LP by neurosurgery
- 20 WBC, 20 RBC, glu 137, protein 32
- ID viral synd, R/o aseptic meningitis
- Day 3 Possible sub-endocardial AMI
- Day 3 Seizure, rx with fosphenytoin
- Rocephin changed to cefipime, levaquin
- Day 9 More responsive, temp to 102.6
- Day 10 Maculopapular rash
17Hospital Course
- EEG Non-specific diffuse slowing
- ECHO LV dysfunction
- Blood cultures negative
- Repeat CT maxillary sinus fluid
- PCR negative for herpes simplex virus
- Tests for systemic vasculitides negative
- Ab for myeloperoxidase
- Ab for proteinase-3
18Hospital Course
- Legionella Ag in urine negative
- Mycoplasm antibody titre negatvie
- Chlamydia pneumoniae IgG, IgA positive
- HIV Ab negative
- Day 11 West Nile Arbovirus (CSF)
19Patient Outcome
- PM R Consult Comprehensive rehab
- Pt extubated, improved neurologically
- Pt able to understand plan
- Discharge on day 26
- nursing home/rehab care
- able to speak, ambulate
- beginning to meet needs
- Seen in ED by same EM MD, doing well
20Fever, AMS Differential Dx
- Encephalitis
- Meningitis
- Meningoencephalitis
- Encephalomyelitis
- Sepsis
21Viral Encephalitis Etiologies
- Arboviruses mosquitoes, ticks
- Herpes viruses
- Herpes simplex
- Epstein-Barr
- CMV
- Varicella zoster
- Measles virus
22Encephalitis Pathophysiology
- Brain inflammation
- Usually caused by a viral etiology
- Focal, multi-focal, or diffuse
- Cerebral edema, hemorrhage, neuronal death
23Encephalitis Pathophysiology
- Blood borne CNS infection
- Diffuse encephalitis
- Transmitted thru other tissue
- Focal infection
- DNA or RNA viruses
24Arbovirus Encephalitis
- Mosquitoes or ticks (vectors)
- Vector-transmitted infection
- Mosquitoes
- 10 encephalitis rate if infected
- 150 to 3000 cases per year
- Ticks
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- Non-US Russian encephalitis
25Herpes Virus Encephalitis
- Able to lie dormant and reactivate
- HSV causes 10-20 of all cases
- 2 per 1,000,000 persons per year
- Usually HSV-1 from oral herpes
- Children, both HSV-1 and 2
- Only treatable cause of encephalitis
26Varicella Encephalitis
- Bad if related to chicken pox
- Adults and children
- In zoster, less severe unless immunocompromised
- Both types are rare
27Epstein-Barr Encephalitis
- Related to mononucleosis
- Fatigue, sore throat, HA, fever
- 1 encephalitis rate
- Usually mild
28CMV Encephalitis
- 5-10 complication rate
- In HIV patients, 50 complicated
- Significant mortality
29Other Encephalitis Causes
- Rabies
- Severe, fatal
- 16 cases between 1980-91 8 US
- Measles, influenza
- Adenoviruses
- 30 mortality rate if encephalitis
- Symptoms of meningitis, coma
- Parasites raccoons, toxoplasmosis
30What is ADEM?
- Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis
- Non-infectious encephalitis
- 2-3 weeks after a viral illness
- 1/3 of encephalitis cases
- Varicella, URIs are common causes
- Autoimmune reaction, white matter
- Myelin sheath damage, as in MS
31Arbovirus Encephalitis
- Eastern equine
- Western Equine
- St Louis
- California
- Japanese B
- West Nile
32Arbovirus Encephalitis Sx
- St Louis West Nile common in US
- Less than 1 cause CNS symptoms
- Sx 2-14 days post-exposure
- Fever, HA, N/V, lethargy
- West Nile Virus
- Maculopapular rash, morbilliform rash
- Loss of muscle tone and weakness
33Arbovirus Motor Sx
- Motor disorders common
- Severe general weakness
- Ataxia, voluntary motor problems
- Tremor, partial paralysis
- Dysphagia, Brocas aphasia
- Hearing and visual symptoms
34Encephalitis Sx
- Sudden onset
- Meningismus
- Stupor, coma
- Seizures, partial paralysis
- Confusion, psychosis
- Speech, memory symptoms
35Encephalitis Diagnosis
- Find treatable etiologies
- CT no changes early
- MRI early HSV changes detectable
- EEG temporal lobe HSV changes
- LP elevated WBCs and protein
- Labs
- Leukocytosis, LFTs, coags, chem, tox
- Viral cultures
36Encephalitis Serum Ab Tests
- Virus only at 2-4 days (too early)
- Serum Ab titres
- Low early levels
- 4-fold increase in convalescent tires
- Obtained 3-5 weeks after sx onset
- PCR will replicate virus DNA
- Quick results (hours)
- Sensitivity equal to viral culture
37Ruling Out Viral Meningitis
- Self limited
- Headache, photosensitivity
- Stiff neck
- Fever, N/V, fatigue also common
- Confusion, psychosis not seen
- Exclude mycoplasma, legionnella
38Treating Viral Encephalitis
- Antibiotics for presumed meningitis
- Acyclovir for presumed HSV Dx
- Steroids?
- Supportive therapies
- Seizure Rx
- Sedation
- Airway control
- Pain and fever meds
39Viral Encephalitis Anti-virals
- Acyclovir for presumed HSV, HZ
- Foscarnet (Foscavir)
- When resistant to Acyclovir
- If adverse reaction to Acyclovir
- Foscarnet or gancyclovir in CMV
- Ribavirin (Virazole)
40Encephalitis Pt Outcome
- 25 relapse rate in HSV disease
- ? Due to relapse or new viral illness
- Poorer outcome with
- Age lt 1, gt 55
- Immunocompromise
- Pre-existing neurological problem
- Specific virus virulence
- Coma does not bad outcome
41Encephalitis Pt Outcome
- Outcome related to mental status at the time
anti-viral Rx initiated - Early use is warranted
- Long-term sequelae can occur
- Motor, speech, cognitive
- Emotional, personality changes
- Sensory problems (vision, hearing)
42Encephalitis Vaccines
- Measles vaccine
- Varicella vaccine
- Rabies vaccine, immunoglobulin
- Japanese encephalitis vaccine
- Experimental West Nile Virus vaccine
43West Nile Virus Encephalitis
- Mosquito-borne, expanding area
- 1/5 mild febrile illness
- 1/150 meningitis, encephalitis
- Advanced age is greatest risk factor
- Clues as to likely WNV infection
- Infected birds or cases identified
- Late summer
- Profound muscle weakness
44West Nile Virus Encephalitis
- IgM Ab testing via Elisa useful
- Test of serum or CSF
- False positives can occur
- Other flaviviral infections (dengue)
- Prior vaccination (yellow fever)
- Rapid reporting is essential
45West Nile Ecology
46West Nile Ecology
47U.S. counties reporting any WNV-infected birds in
1999 (N 28 counties)
48U.S. counties reporting any WNV-infected birds in
2000 (N 136 counties)
49U.S. counties reporting any WNV-infected birds in
2001 (N 328 counties)
50U.S. Counties Reporting WNV-Positive Dead Birds,
2002
15,745 birds 1,888 counties 42 states D.C.
Edward P. Sloan, MD, MPH
51West Nile Virus
52WNV Encephalitis Diagnosis
- Leukocytosis, lymphocytopenia
- Hyponatremia
- CSF pleocytosis, lymphocytes
- Elevated CSF protein
- Normal CT
- MR enhanced leptomeninges or periventricular
areas
53Encephalitis MR Findings
- Inflamed portion of the temporal lobe, involving
the uncus and adjacent parahippocampal gyrus, in
brightest white on MR.
54WNV Antibody Diagnosis
- ELISA detection of WNV IgM
- 95 CSF WNV IgM rate
- IgM does note cross BBB
- CSF IgM suggests CNS infection
- 90 remain positive if tested within 8 days on
symptom onset
55WNV Antibody Diagnosis
- Asymptomatic pts common
- In endemic area, IgM could be high
- Acute, convalescent titres
- Viral culture low yield
- Real-time PCR
- 55 CSF positive, 10 serum
56WNV Encephalitis Pt Outcome
- Overall, 4-14 mortality
- Age gt 70, 15-29 mortality
- DM, immunosuppression also predict worse outcome
57WNV Encephalitis Prevention
- Reducing the of vector mosquitoes
- Draining standing water sites
- Methoprene spraying (no maturation)
- Adulticides (organophos, pyrethroids)
- Prevent mosquito bites
- 50 DEET, 10 DEET in children
- Permethrin to clothing, fabrics
- Citronella (less effective)
58Key Learning Points
- AMS, fever, weakness encephalitis
- Know clues for West Nile virus
- Early use of ceftriaxone, acyclovir
- Supportive care essential
- Consultation for best diagnostics
- Reportable public health disease
- Prevention is best approach
59Questions?
FERNE www.ferne.org edsloan_at_uic.edu 312 413
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