|
The most common infectious causes of meningitis
vary according to an individual's age, habits, living environment,
and health status. While nonbacterial types of meningitis are more
common, bacterial meningitis is the more potentially life-threatening.
Three bacterial agents are responsible for about 80% of all
bacterial meningitis cases. These bacteria are Haemophilus
influenzae type b, Neisseria meningitidis (causing
meningococcal meningitis), and Streptococcus pneumoniae (causing
pneumococcal meningitis).
In newborns, the most common agents of meningitis
are those that are contracted from the newborn's mother, including
Group B streptococci (becoming an increasingly common infecting
organism in the newborn period),
Escherichia coli, and Listeria
monocytogenes. The highest incidence of meningitis occurs in
babies under a month old, with an increased risk of meningitis
continuing through about two years of age.
Older children are more frequently infected by
the bacteria Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria
meningitidis, and Streptococci pneumoniae.
Adults are most commonly infected by either S.
pneumoniae or N. meningitidis, with pneumococcal
meningitis the more common. Certain conditions predispose to this
type of meningitis, including alcoholism and chronic upper
respiratory tract infections (especially of the middle ear, sinuses,
and mastoids).
N. meningitidis is the only organism that
can cause epidemics of meningitis. In particular, these have
occurred when a child in a crowded day-care situation or a military
recruit in a crowded training camp has fallen ill with meningococcal
meningitis.
Viral causes of meningitis include the herpes
simplex virus, the mumps and measles viruses (against which most
children are protected due to mass immunization programs), the virus
that causes chicken pox, the rabies virus, and a number of viruses
that are acquired through the bites of infected mosquitoes.
A number of medical conditions predispose
individuals to meningitis caused by specific organisms. Patients
with AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) are more prone to
getting meningitis from fungi, as well as from the agent that causes
tuberculosis. Patients who have had their spleens removed, or whose
spleens are no longer functional (as in the case of patients with
sickle cell disease) are more susceptible to other infections,
including meningococcal and pneumococcal meningitis.
The majority of meningitis infections are
acquired by blood-borne spread. A person may have another type of
infection (of the lungs, throat, or tissues of the heart) caused by
an organism that can also cause meningitis. If this initial
infection is not properly treated, the organism will continue to
multiply, find its way into the blood stream, and be delivered in
sufficient quantities to invade past the blood brain barrier. Direct
spread occurs when an organism spreads to the meninges from infected
tissue next to or very near the meninges. This can occur, for
example, with a severe, poorly treated ear or sinus infection.
Patients who suffer from skull fractures possess
abnormal openings to the sinuses, nasal passages, and middle ears.
Organisms that usually live in the human respiratory system without
causing disease can pass through openings caused by such fractures,
reach the meninges, and cause infection. Similarly, patients who
undergo surgical procedures or who have had foreign bodies
surgically placed within their skulls (such as tubes to drain
abnormal amounts of accumulated CSF) have an increased risk of
meningitis.
Organisms can also reach the meninges via an
uncommon but interesting method called intraneural spread. This
involves an organism invading the body at a considerable distance
away from the head, spreading along a nerve, and using that nerve as
a kind of ladder into the skull, where the organism can multiply and
cause meningitis. Herpes simplex virus is known to use this type of
spread, as is the rabies virus.
The most classic symptoms of meningitis (particularly
of bacterial meningitis) include fever, headache, vomiting,
sensitivity to light (photophobia), irritability, severe fatigue (lethargy),
stiff neck, and a reddish purple rash on the skin. Untreated, the
disease progresses with seizures, confusion, and eventually coma.
A very young infant may not show the classic
signs of meningitis. Early in infancy, a baby's immune system is not
yet developed enough to mount a fever in response to infection, so
fever may be absent. Some infants with meningitis have seizures as
their only identifiable symptom. Similarly, debilitated elderly
patients may not have fever or other identifiable symptoms of
meningitis.
Damage due to meningitis occurs from a variety of
phenomena. The action of infectious agents on the brain tissue is
one direct cause of damage. Other types of damage may be due to the
mechanical effects of swelling and compression of brain tissue
against the bony surface of the skull. Swelling of the meninges may
interfere with the normal absorption of CSF by blood vessels,
causing accumulation of CSF and damage from the resulting pressure
on the brain. Interference with the brain's carefully regulated
chemical environment may cause damaging amounts of normally present
substances (carbon dioxide, potassium) to accumulate. Inflammation
may cause the blood-brain barrier to become less effective at
preventing the passage of toxic substances into brain tissue. |