The Citizen (Gauteng)

Dr Dulcy: Managing meningitis

DANGER: CAN BE LIFE-THREATENIN­G IF NOT TREATED TIMEOUSLY

- Dr Dulcy Rakumakoe

It can be caused by a viral infection, or bacterial and fungal infections.

Meningitis is an inflammati­on of the membranes (called the meninges) surroundin­g your brain and spinal cord. This inflammati­on from meningitis typically triggers symptoms such as headache, fever and a stiff neck.

It can be caused by a viral infection, or bacterial and fungal infections.

Some cases of meningitis can improve without treatment in a few weeks. Others can be life-threatenin­g and require hospitalis­ation and emergency antibiotic treatment.

It is important that you consult immediatel­y if you suspect that you have meningitis.

Early treatment will prevent serious complicati­ons. Delayed treatment increases the risk of permanent brain damage or death.

Seek immediate medical care if you or someone in your family has meningitis symptoms like: Fever

Severe, non-improving headache

Confusion

Vomiting

Stiff neck

Causes

Viral infections are the most common cause of meningitis, followed by bacterial infections and, rarely, fungal infections. Because bacterial infections can be life-threatenin­g, identifyin­g the cause is essential.

Bacterial meningitis

Bacteria that enter the bloodstrea­m and travel to the brain and spinal cord.

It can also occur when bacteria directly invade the meninges.

This may be caused by an ear or sinus infection, a skull fracture, or, rarely, after some surgeries. Several strains of bacteria can cause acute bacterial meningitis, most commonly:

Streptococ­cus pneumoniae (pneumococc­us). This bacterium is the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in infants, young children and adults. It more commonly causes pneumonia or ear or sinus infections. A vaccine can help prevent this infection.

Neisseria meningitid­is (meningococ­cus). These bacteria commonly cause an upper respirator­y infection but can cause meningococ­cal meningitis when they enter the bloodstrea­m.

This is a highly contagious infection that affects mainly teenagers and young adults.

A vaccine can help prevent infection.

Haemophilu­s influenzae (haemophilu­s). It was once the leading cause of bacterial meningitis in children. But new Hib vaccines have greatly reduced the number of cases of this type of meningitis.

Listeria monocytoge­nes (listeria).

These bacteria can be found in unpasteuri­sed cheeses, hot dogs and lunch meats.

Pregnant women, newborns, older adults and people with weakened immune systems are most susceptibl­e.

Viral meningitis

Viral meningitis is usually mild and often clears on its own.

Most cases are caused by a group of viruses known as enteroviru­ses, which are most common in late summer and early fall.

Viruses such as herpes simplex virus, HIV, mumps, West Nile virus and others also can cause viral meningitis.

Chronic meningitis

Slow-growing organisms (such as fungi and Mycobacter­ium tuberculos­is) that invade the membranes and fluid surroundin­g your brain cause it.

The symptoms – headaches, fever, vomiting and mental cloudiness – are similar to those of acute meningitis.

Fungal meningitis

It is relatively uncommon and causes chronic meningitis. It may mimic acute bacterial meningitis.

It isn’t contagious from person to person. Cryptococc­al meningitis is a common fungal form of the disease that affects people with immune deficienci­es, such as Aids.

Other meningitis causes

Meningitis can also result from noninfecti­ous causes, such as chemical reactions, drug allergies, some types of cancer and inflammato­ry diseases.

Treatment Bacterial meningitis

Must be treated immediatel­y with antibiotic­s/corticoste­roids.

Viral meningitis

Most cases improve on their own in several weeks. Other types of meningitis

Your doctor may start antiviral and antibiotic treatment.

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