| Literature DB >> 30669985 |
Else Quist-Paulsen1,2, Anne-Marte Bakken Kran3,4,5, Elisabeth S Lindland3,6,7, Katrine Ellefsen8, Leiv Sandvik9, Oona Dunlop10, Vidar Ormaasen11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recognizing patients with encephalitis may be challenging. The cardinal symptom, encephalopathy, has a wide array of differential diagnoses. In this prospective study we aimed to explore the etiology of encephalitis and to assess the diagnostic accuracy of symptoms and clinical findings in patients with encephalitis in an encephalopathic population.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system; Diagnostic accuracy; Encephalopathy; Infectious encephalitis; Lumbar puncture
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30669985 PMCID: PMC6343342 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-018-3570-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Inclusion of patients and study groups; Legend: a 272 patients met the inclusion criteria; for 28 patients no informed consent was obtained. b 108 patients in whom no encephalopathy was found were excluded from present study
Case definitions
| Encephalopathy | Decreased/altered consciousness (unconsciousness, the patient is hard to keep awake or extensively tiredness) |
| Encephalitis | Encephalopathy (=major criterion) for more than > 24 hrs, with no other cause identified and at least 2 of the following: |
Diagnoses in patients with encephalopathy of other cause than encephalitis (n = 117, group B)
| Diagnostic category | No of patients |
|---|---|
| Infection outside CNS ( | |
| Respiratory tract | 21 |
| Urinary tract | 3 |
| Unknown/ other | 15 |
| Infection in CNS ( | |
| Bacterial meningitisb | 11 |
| Aseptic meningitisc | 5 |
| Other CNS infectionsd | 3 |
| Neurological disease ( | |
| Epilepsy | 13 |
| Nonepileptic seizures | 4 |
| Othere | 7 |
| Encephalopathies ( | |
| Toxic | 4 |
| Metabolic | 4 |
| Other diagnosis ( | |
| Cerebrovascular disordersg | 6 |
| Psychiatric disordersh | 4 |
| Unspecified disorientation and/ or coma | 4 |
| Malignancy in CNSi | 3 |
| Pulmonary embolism | 3 |
| Otherj | 7 |
a Other than patients with encephalitis. b S.pneumonia (6), S.aureus (3), N meningitides (1), K.oxytoca (1). c Culture negative meningitis. d Neurosyfilis, possible H1N1 encephalopathy, intracerebral abcess. e Transient global amnesia (4), headache/migraine (3). f Alcohol withdrawal (2), drug intoxication (2), hepatic encephalopathy (2), hyponatriema (2). g Cerebral vasculitis (1), sinuous venous thrombosis (1), cerebrovascular accident (4). h Depression (1), psychosis (2), unspecified delirium (1). i Oligoastrocytoma (2), unknown (1). j Dementia with other conditions (2), inflammatory disease (2, Morbus Adult still and Hemophagocytic lymphohistocytosis), medication side effect (1), vestibularis neuritis (1), arrhythmia (1)
Etiology and number of minor criteria for patients diagnosed with encephalitis
| Number of minor criteria | Etiologya | No of patients |
|---|---|---|
| 2 minor criteria | Varicella zoster virus (VZV)b | 2 |
| Adenovirus (ADV)b | 1 | |
|
| 1 | |
|
| 1 | |
| Unknown | 2 | |
| ≥3 minor criteria | Herpes simplex type 1b | 1 |
|
| 2 | |
|
| 1 | |
| NMDAr | 1 | |
| Unknown | 7 |
aAgent confirmed by either by b PCR in CSF, c intrathecal antibodyproduction or dpositive culture of M tuberculosis in CSF, e autopsy, sequencing of Naegleria fowleri. f One patient had dual infection with Cryptococcus neoformans
Clinical symptoms and findings of patients with encephalitis compared to patients with encephalopathy of other cause
| Characteristicsa | Encephalitis (group A) | Encephalopathy (group B) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 49 (±21) | 57 (±21) | 0.119 |
| Gender, male | 6/19 (32) | 58/ 117 (50) | 0.145 |
| Duration of hospital stay, days | 20 (10–37) | 8 (4–17)) |
|
| ICU | 10/19 (53) | 81/117 (69) | 0.154 |
| Death during hospitalization | 3/19 (16) | 10/117 (9) | 0.326 |
| No of patients with CNS symptoms < 24 hrsb | 8/17 (47) | 68/101 (67) | 0.106 |
| Immunodeficiency | 4/19 (21) | 28/ 117 (24) | 0.784 |
| Prodromal sicknessc | 14/19 (74) | 75/109 (69) | 0.670 |
| Travel within 6 months | 8/18 (44) | 17/100 (17) |
|
| Headache | 12/19 (63) | 41/ 90 (46) | 0.163 |
| Photophobia | 6/17 (35) | 16/ 70 (23) | 0.290 |
| Nausea | 13/16 (81) | 35/ 81 (43) |
|
| Personality changed | 9/ 19 (47) | 25/105 (24) |
|
| Confusiond | 15/19 (79) | 62/106 (59) | 0.091 |
| Seizuresd | 5/18 (28) | 29/ 105 (28) | 0.989 |
| Fever | 14/19 (74) | 55/117 (47) |
|
| Focal neurology | 9/18 (50) | 23/ 99 (23) |
|
| GCSe | 14 (12–14) | 13 (10–14) | 0.219 |
| GCS ≤14 | 16/18 (89) | 90/114 (79) | 0.324 |
| GCS ≤8 | 1/18 (6) | 27/114 (24) | 0.080 |
| Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 140 (±28) | 132 (±28) | 0.275 |
| Respiratory rate (/min) | 19 (±6) | 21(±7) | 0.112 |
| MRI findings suggesting encephalitis | 8/17 (47) | 1/63 (2) |
|
| EEG findings indicative of encephalitis | 11/15 (73) | 3/61 (3) |
|
a Data are presented as n/N (%), median (IQR) or mean (±SD). Significant differences in bold. b Patient’s description on how long they had been suffering from CNS symptoms before admission. c Prodromal sickness: symptoms before onset of CNS symptoms. d Observed/described either by patients, relatives or treating physician. e GCS at the day of LP, for 17 patients who were intubated before LP the GCS closest to intubation is registered, 4 patients had their LP > 24 h after intubation (=missing data). Also tested but not found to be relevant or not statistically significant: alcohol use, smoking habits, neck stiffness, illness among close relatives, vomiting, diastolic blood pressure, heart rate
Comparison of laboratory parameters of encephalitis versus encephalopathy of other cause
| Analysis | Encephalitis (group A) | Encephalopathy (group B) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blood resultsa | |||
| Leucocyte count (×109/L) | 9.1 (±4.0) | 12.1 (±6.8) |
|
| - Leucocytes < 10 ×109/Lb | 13/19 (68) | 50/117 (43) |
|
| Neutrophil count (×109/L) | 6.8 (± 3.8) | 10.4 (±6.6) |
|
| - Neutrophil < 7.3 ×109/Lb | 12/19 (63) | 34/98 (35) |
|
| ESR (mm/hr) | 12.5 (3.0–26) | 22.5 (9–46) |
|
| - ESR < 17 mm/hrb | 13/18 (72) | 41/100 (41) |
|
| CRP (mg/L) | 6.3 (0.9–53) | 32.0 (2.5–118.0) | 0.09 |
| D-dimer (μg/L, FEU) | 0.6 (0.4–1.4) | 1.9 (0.7–4.0) |
|
| CSF resultsa | |||
| Leucocytes (×106/L) | 80 (22–153) | 2 (1–5.5) |
|
| - CSF WBC 5–100 (×106/L) | 11/19 (58) | 20/117 (17) |
|
| Protein (g/L) | 0.87 (0.45–1.1) | 0.39 (0.30–0.59) |
|
| - CSF protein > 0.45 (g/L)c | 15/19 (79) | 44/116 (38) |
|
| Glucose (mmol/L) | 3.2 (±1.2) | 4.1 (±1.8) |
|
| - CSF: blood glucose | 0.5 (±0.2) | 0.6 (±0.2) | 0.071 |
| Albumin (mg/L) | 566 (295–747) | 231 (147–345) |
|
| - CSF: blood albumin | 13.6 (7.0–18) | 6.3 (3.5–9.8) |
|
a data are median (IQR), mean (±SD) or n/N (%).b No of patients with value below hospital reference level. c No of patients with value above hospital reference level. Analyzed, but not found relevant or significant; Hb, thrombocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, lymphocytes, sodium, potassium, creatinine, lactate dehydrogenase, ASAT, ALAT, INR, CK, total protein, albumin, and CSF opening pressure
Comparisons between encephalitis (group A) and encephalopathy (group B)
| Symptom/ finding | AUC | Univariate OR (95% CI) | Multivariate analysis (p, 95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nausea | 0.69 | 5.7 (1.5–22) | 0.010 | 8.9 (p 0.010, 1.7–46) |
| Focal finding | 0.63 | 3.3 (1.1–9.3) | 0.024 | |
| Fever | 0.63 | 3.2 (1.1–9.3) | 0.038 | 6.6 (p 0.011, 1.6–28) |
| Travel last 6 months | 0.64 | 3.9 (1.3–11) | 0.012 | |
| ESR <17 mm/hra | 0.66 | 3.7 (1.2–11) | 0.019 | 6.9 (p 0.014, 1.5–32) |
| Blood leucocytes <10×109/La | 0.63 | 2.9 (1.0–8.2) | 0.043 | |
| Blood neutrophils <7.3×109/La | 0.64 | 3.2 (1.1–9.0) | 0.024 |
aHospital reference levels as described in methods
Fig. 2ROC curves for combination of clinical characteristics for the diagnosis of encephalitis in an encephalopathic population; Legend: Figure showing ROC curves of the model with the highest diagnostic accuracy of predicting encephalitis from regression analyses. AUC (95% CI) of predicted probabilities; fever and nausea: 0.76 (95% CI, 0.65–0.87); fever, nausea and ESR <17 mm/hr: 0.85 (95% CI, 0.76–0.94). When including the finding of CSF WBC of 5- 100 ×106/L to the final model, an AUC of 0.9 (95% CI, 0.0.81–0.98) was reached