| Literature DB >> 21159185 |
Clare Huppatz1, Yash Gawarikar, Chris Levi, Paul M Kelly, David Williams, Craig Dalton, Peter Massey, Rodney Givney, David N Durrheim.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The clinical diagnosis of encephalitis is often difficult and identification of a causative organism is infrequent. The encephalitis syndrome may herald the emergence of novel pathogens with outbreak potential. Individual treatment and an effective public health response rely on identifying a specific pathogen. In Australia there have been no studies to try to improve the identification rate of encephalitis pathogens. This study aims to review the diagnostic assessment of adult suspected encephalitis cases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21159185 PMCID: PMC3018438 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-10-353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
ICD-10 code diagnosis and the number of cases with a laboratory confirmed pathogen diagnosis
| ICD-10 Code | Code name | Cases | Pathogen confirmed by laboratory test |
|---|---|---|---|
| A321 | Listerial meningitis & meningoencephalitis | 3 | 3 |
| A858 | Other specified viral encephalitis | 3 | 2 |
| B004 | Herpesviral encephalitis | 10 | 2 |
| B011 | Varicella encephalitis | 1 | 1 |
| B020 | Zoster encephalitis | 3 | 1 |
| G052 | Encephalitis, myelitis & encephalomyelitis-other infectious and parasitic diseases | 1 | 0 |
| G040 | Acute disseminated encephalitis | 1 | N/A |
| G048 | Other encephalitis, myelitis and encephalomyelitis | 1 | N/A |
| G049 | Encephalitis, myelitis and encephalomyelitis, unspecified | 10 | N/A |
| A86 | Unspecified viral encephalitis | 41 | N/A |
Signs and symptoms "at presentation"* for all hospitalised adult encephalitis cases in three Hunter New England hospitals, Australia, July 1998-December 2007
| Symptoms at presentation | Cases, n = 74 (%) |
|---|---|
| 57 (77.0%) | |
| 51 (68.9%) | |
| 46 (62.1%) | |
| 26 (35.1%) | |
| 24 (32.4%) | |
| 23 (31.1%) | |
| 19 (25.7%) | |
| 13 (17.6%) | |
| 11 (14.9%) | |
| 9 (12.1%) | |
| 7 (9.5%) | |
| 2 (2.7%) | |
*a sign/symptom was considered to be present "at presentation" if the patient/next of kin reported to have had the sign/symptom in the 24 hours prior to presentation or if it was documented in the patient record during the first 48 hours of their admission.
Specific encephalitis pathogens and frequency of testing
| Viral pathogens | Testing frequency, n = 74 (%) | Bacterial pathogens | Testing frequency, n = 74 (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adenovirus | 5 (6.8%) | Bartonella sp | 1 (1.4%) |
| Australian Bat Lyssavirus | 0 | Chlamydia species | 5 (6.8%) |
| Cytomegalovirus | 18 (24.3%) | Legionella pneumonia | 4 (5.4%) |
| Enterovirus group | 20 (27.0%) | Mycoplasma pneumoniae | 9 (12.2%) |
| Epstein-Barr virus | 16 (21.6%) | Q fever | 10 (13.5%) |
| Flavivirus | 11 (14.9%) | ||
| Herpes simplex virus | 53 (71.6%) | ||
| Influenza A & B viruses | 6 (8.1%) | Cryptococcus | 46 (62.2%) |
| Japanese Encephalitis | 0 | Mycobactrium tuberculosis | 11 (14.9%) |
| Kunjin | 2 (2.7%) | Rickettsiae | 2 (2.7%) |
| Measles virus | 1 (1.4%) | Toxoplasma | 7 (9.5%) |
| Mumps virus | 0 | ||
| Murray Valley Encephalitis | 5 (6.8%) | ||
| Rubella | 2 (2.7%) | ||
| Varicella zoster virus | 14 (18.9%) | ||