Bacterial and Fungal Brain Abscess
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BACKGROUND AND CLINICAL INFORMATION:
Head
Age: Brain abscess can be seen in all age but most
frequently seen in patients under 40 years old.
Etiology: Brain abscess are associated with lung infections
(such as lung abscess, bronchiectasis, and empyema), congenital heart disease,
infectious endocarditis, sinusitis, ottitis media, dental infection, penetrating
wound, compromised immunity, and IVDA.
Subdural empyema:
Subdural empyemas represent an infectious
process between the dura mater and arachnoid.
They
are typically intracranial; spinal subdural empyemas are exceedingly
rare. Usually a sigle agent is involved with aerobic and anaerobic
streptococci as the most common etiologic agents.
In adults, the arachnoid is highly impermeable to bacterial
infections occurring adjacent to it. Consequently, extension of subdural
infection to the subarachnoid space is rare, although a sterile subarachnoid
inflammatory exudate may develop.
In infants, subdural empyema may progress to leptomeningitis.
Microbiology: Most brain abscess not due to direct brain trauma
are caused by anaerobic or microaerophilic bacteria, especially streptococci,
and special care must be taken in the bacteriology laboratory to search properly
for these fastidious pathogens.
Locations
and prediposing factors:
Sinusitis and ear infection: Temporal lobe or cerebellar hemispheric abscess
are usually due to infection of contiguous sites or primary infection such
as ottitis media or mastoiditis. Frontal or temporal lobe abscess may also
associate with frontoethmoidal sinusitis, and sphenoidal sinusitis.
Predominantly caused by Streptococci, Bacteroides, Enterobacteriaceae,
Staphylococcus aureus, and Haemophilus species.
Paranasal sinusitis is overwhelmingly predominant predisposing factor
for subdural empyemas. Infection spreads from mucosal veins of the frontal
sinus to emissary veins that link the facial and dural venous sinus systems.
The same can happen with middle ear infection.
Dental infection: Frontal lobe abscess. Common infections agents
include mixed Fusobacterium, Bacteroides, and Streptococcus species.
Penetrating wound or
postsurgical infection: The
location is related to the location of the wound or surgical site. Common
infectious agents include Staphylococcus aureus, streptococci,
Enterobacteriaceae, Clostridium species.
Distant site of primary
infections: Multiple abscess cavities are seen and is most
commonly seen along the distribution of the middle cerebral artery. Multiple
abscesses due to congenital diseases are associted with Streptococcus
viridans, anaerobic and microaerophilic streptococci, and Haemophilis
species. Multiple abscesses associated with lung infections (such as lung
abscess, empyema, and bronchiectases) are associated wtih Fusobacterilum,
Actinomyces, Bacteroides, streptococci, Nocardia asteroides.
Immunecompromised host: Multiple abscess cavities are seen and is most
commonly seen along the distribution of the middle cerebral artery.
Patients with abnormal
cell-mediated immunity (such as AIDS) usually
develop abscess due to Toxoplasma gondii, Nocardia asteroides,
Cryptococcus neoformans, Listera monocytogenes, Mycobacterium
species.
Patients with neutropenia or
neutrophil defects are usually due to aerobic
gram-negative bacteria, Aspergillus species, Zygonycetes (including Mucor
ramosissimus), Candida species.
Transplantation: The incidence of brain abscess in solid organ
recipients are related to the type of transplantation (which dictate the
degree of immunosuppression)- overall (0.61%), liver (0.63%), kidney
(0.36%), heart and heart-lung (1.17%). Nonfungal abscess (Nocardia and
Toxoplasma sp) are seen in healthy graft recipients long after
transplantation. Medical therapy is usually effective in these patients.
Fungal abscess (Candida and Aspergillus sp) are more commonly seen in
patients with complications including major subsequent operations,
retransplantations, antirejection therapy, associated bacteremia or viremia,
and multiorgan failure. [Arch Surg 1997 132:304-310]
Macroscopically, abscess has a necrotic or pus containing center and rimmed by firable brain parenchymal tissue. [Figure]
They
are usually associated with a marked degree of edema. Such edema will show up in
MRI or CT images.
Abscess
due to metastatic infection of a primary site are most frequently located in the
white matter, which is less vascular than the gray matter. Septic emboli may be
trapped at the gray white junction where there is a sudden decrease in the
caliber of vessels.
Abscess due to local infection such as ottitis media will have the cortex penetrated before the white matter is involved.