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Helen Mactier a Department of Child Health, Royal Hospital for
Sick Children, Glasgow G3 8SJ, b Fraser of
Allander Unit, Royal Hospital for Sick Children
Correspondence to: Dr Mactier
Two children presented with signs of raised
intracranial pressure and sepsis. Computed tomography showed
relatively large ventricles, suggesting obstructive hydrocephalus.
Raised intracranial pressure was confirmed at ventriculostomy, but
cerebrospinal fluid was sterile. Streptococcus
pneumoniae infection was subsequently documented in both
patients, and findings at postmortem examination in one confirmed that
he had acute purulent basal meningitis.
Case 1
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A boy presented to a district general hospital on the eve of his
first birthday. He had collapsed at home, and his parents reported that
for three days he had had fever, anorexia, vomiting, and increasing
drowsiness. On arrival at hospital he was poorly perfused, could barely
be roused, and his anterior fontanelle was bulging. The boy's blood
pressure was 117/66 mm Hg and his occipitofrontal circumference was
50.6 cm (>90th centile). Initial investigations showed haemoglobin
concentration 81 g/l, white cell count 23.9×109/l
(neutrophils 18.9×109/l), platelets
226×109/l, serum urea and electrolytes normal, and C
reactive protein 137 mg/l. He improved after resuscitation with
plasma; then, because of recurrent episodes of bradycardia, he was
intubated and ventilated. Intravenous ceftazidime and penicillin were
given. The boy had been previously well, was fully immunised, and had
been making appropriate neurodevelopmental progress. His large head had
been noted previously but was attributed to a familial tendency
and was not investigated.
he had fixed
dilatation of the left pupil, loss of amplitude on the
electroencephalogram, and increasing blood pressure. Intravenous
mannitol (0.5 g/kg) was given before an intraventricular catheter was
inserted. The initial cerebrospinal fluid pressure was 52 mm Hg, and
analysis of the ventricular cerebrospinal fluid showed white cell count
3/mm3, red cell count 1500/mm3, protein
0.34 g/l, glucose 2.9 mmol/l, and latex tests for Neisseria
meningitidis, Haemophilus influenzae, S
pneumoniae, and group B streptococcus all negative. Direct
culture of the cerebrospinal fluid had negative results; enriched
culture produced only coagulase negative staphylococcal
species.

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Fig 1.
(left) Computed tomogram of patient in case 1 showing dilatation of the lateral and third ventricles with reduction
of the extra axial spaces; grey-white differentiation is well preserved
Fig 2.
(right) Computed tomogram of patient in case 1 showing widespread cerebral necrosis
Case 2
An 111/2 year old boy presented to this hospital with a
five day history of worsening fever, headache, anorexia, vomiting, and
drowsiness. There was nothing noteworthy in his medical history and
he had not been given any medication. On admission to hospital, he was
poorly perfused, with fever and noticeable nuchal rigidity. The boy's
Glasgow coma score was 9 and deteriorating, his pupils were small
and reactive, and his fundi were normal. The results of initial
investigations included haemoglobin 140 g/l, white cell count
29.8×109/l (neutrophils 28.6×109/l),
platelets 246×109/l, serum urea, electrolytes and ammonia
normal, C reactive protein 63 mg/l. The boy was resuscitated with
intravenous plasma and given intravenous cefotaxime, benzylpenicillin,
and mannitol before emergency computed tomography. Scans showed
prominent temporal horns with effacement of the basal cisterns and some
diminution of grey-white differentiation, in keeping with early brain
swelling and developing obstructive hydrocephalus. The contrast study
showed no focal lesion but ill defined enhancement around the posterior
cerebral arteries, suggesting basal meningitis (fig 3). An
intraventricular catheter was inserted soon afterwards, and the initial
cerebrospinal fluid pressure was >30 mm Hg. Cerebrospinal fluid
analyses showed white cell count 180/mm3, red cell count
>5000/mm3, protein 1.2 g/l, glucose 5.5 mmol/l, and
negative results on latex tests for N meningitidis,
H influenzae, S pneumoniae, and group B
streptococcus. In addition, direct and enriched cultures had negative
results. Blood culture taken on admission to hospital subsequently grew
S pneumoniae serotype 14, although repeat latex
agglutination of cerebrospinal fluid for this particular serotype was
negative. Chest x ray showed left lobar pneumonia.
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Discussion |
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Acute bacterial meningitis remains a relatively common and potentially fatal condition in childhood, and S pneumoniae is found to be the infecting organism in 10-20% of cases.1 As the box shows, presentation is generally with fever and signs of cerebral dysfunction. Classic nuchal rigidity may be absent in younger children, but most will have a peripheral leucocytosis.2
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Obstructive hydrocephalus in bacterial meningitis
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Cerebrospinal fluid is formed by the choroid plexus in the lateral ventricles, from where it flows via the third and fourth ventricles to the subarachnoid space. It is reabsorbed subsequently by the arachnoid villi in the intracranial venous sinuses.3 The flow of cerebrospinal fluid may be blocked at the third or fourth ventricles (obstructive hydrocephalus) or at the arachnoid villi (communicating hydrocephalus). In bacterial meningitis, neutrophil migration into the subarachnoid space follows bacterial invasion. The resultant purulent exudate tends to collect in the Rolandic and Sylvanian sulci over the cerebral hemispheres and in the basal cisterns, where the subarachnoid space is deepest4 and where, presumably, cerebrospinal fluid flow is most sluggish. The exudate interferes with absorption of cerebrospinal fluid by the arachnoid villi and may also cause obstructive hydrocephalus by obstructing the foramina of Luschka and Magendie. Typically, the obstruction occurs towards the end of the second week of the illness, when neutrophils begin to degenerate and fibroblasts proliferate in the exudate. In case 1, however, findings at postmortem examination were of an acute inflammatory exudate blocking the exit foramina, entirely consistent with the three day history of illness.
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It was surprising that in both patients, culture of ventricular cerebrospinal fluid had negative results. Bacterial invasion into the cerebrospinal fluid from the nasopharynx in pneumococcal meningitis occurs via the choroid plexus and cerebral microvasculature,5 and in the primate model the highest concentration of organisms early in the course of H influenzae meningitis is in the lateral ventricles.6 Previous exposure to antibiotics does not explain failure to culture the infecting organism from ventricular cerebrospinal fluid in these two patients. Indeed, in case 1, S pneumoniae was grown from cerebrospinal fluid sampled after death and despite more than 48 hours of appropriate intravenous antibiotic treatment. A latex agglutination test performed with prior knowledge of the phage type of the pneumococcus (as in case 2) detects fragments of the infecting organism at a concentration of 5 ng/l (500 bacteria/ml) (LE Smart, personal communication). The absence of white blood cells in both ventricular and lumbar cerebrospinal fluid from the patient in case 1 is consistent with infection localised to the posterior fossa and obstructing the flow of cerebrospinal fluid. Presumably the route of infection was not via the choroid plexus. The acute inflammatory exudate in pneumococcal infection is particularly tenacious. Only one major textbook of paediatrics acknowledges that ventricular cerebrospinal fluid can be sterile at the same time as lumbar cerebrospinal fluid is purulent.7 We believe that this fact is not generally recognised.
Cerebral herniation is well recognised as a complication of
pneumococcal meningitis.
8 9
However, diagnosing
critically high intracranial pressure is difficult
particularly after
seizures and in sedated ventilated patients
and a high index of
suspicion is necessary.9 Early use of osmotic agents, with
or without ventricular drainage, may reduce the risks of long term
morbidity or death, but mortality and morbidity are still
appreciable.8-10 Computed tomography is not an accurate
measure of intracranial pressure11 but is appropriate to
exclude mechanical causes of raised intracranial pressure before lumbar
puncture in children with suspected meningitis and a reduced level of
consciousness.12 Ventriculomegaly is relatively common in
acute bacterial meningitis in childhood and may be progressive in the
absence of raised intraventricular pressure, presumably as a result of
cerebral atrophy.13 Thus, computed tomograms must be
interpreted in conjunction with the clinical status of the patient, and
computed tomography may need to be repeated, particularly if there is
no response to treatment. With hindsight, the patient in case 1 had
simple familial macrocephaly
appreciation of this fact should have
prompted earlier ventriculostomy.
Ventriculostomy is a safe and relatively simple procedure. 12 14 It enables cerebral perfusion pressure (mean arterial pressure minus intracranial pressure) to be calculated and intracranial pressure reduced by removal of cerebrospinal fluid. Unlike cerebral oedema, which is common in meningitis,15 hydrocephalus can be treated by appropriate drainage of the cerebrospinal fluid, and therefore needs to be identified.
Acute obstructive hydrocephalus is thought to be an uncommon presenting feature of bacterial meningitis, usually occuring in younger children who have had previous treatment with antibiotics. 8 13 We could find no record of the incidence of this complication in published reports, nor any other case report, but since preparing this manuscript we have seen two other children with obstructive hydrocephalus as a presenting feature of bacterial meningitis. All patients with suspected meningitis and decreased level of consciousness should have urgent brain imaging to exclude obstructive hydrocephalus before lumbar puncture.
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Acknowledgments |
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Funding: None.
Conflict of interest: None.
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References |
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(Accepted 3 December 1997)
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