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Encephalitis

Management of suspected viral encephalitis in adults – Association of British Neurologists and British Infection Association National Guidelines. Published: Apr 2012.

Mark Ellul, Tom Solomon. Acute encephalitis – diagnosis and management. Clin Med (Lond). 2018 Apr;18(2):155-159.

Encephalitis

Encephalitis is inflammation of the brain parenchyma. It most commonly has an infectious cause, particularly viral encephalitis, but autoimmune encephalitis is also an important cause.

Updated UKMLA guide to encephalitis, which covers causes, risk factors, symptoms, diagnosis, and management.

Causes and Risk Factors

Despite advances in diagnostic testing, the underlying cause of encephalitis remains unidentified in 37–62% of cases. [Ref1][Ref2]

Category Causes Associated risk factors
Viral (most common)
  • HSV (esp. HSV-1) – most common viral cause
  • VZV
  • Enteroviruses
  • CMV
  • EBV
  • HIV
  • Measles
  • Bimodal age peak
  • Immunocompromised
Autoimmune Key antibodies are formed against:

  • NMDAR antibodies – major cause
  • VGKC-complex / LGI-1 antibodies
  • Anti-Hu, anti-Ma, anti-GAD antibodies
Autoimmune encephalitis is often paraneoplastic

NMDAR encephalitis is strongly associated with:

  • Young females (median: 25 y/o)
  • Ovarian teratoma

VGKC-complex / LGI-1 encephalitis is associated with:

  • Thymomas
  • Small cell lung cancers

Anti-Hu is associated with small cell lung cancer; anti-Ma is associated with testicular cancer

Bacterial, parasitic, fungal (least common)
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Mycoplasma pneumoniae
  • Listeria
  • Syphilis
  • Lyme disease
  • Malaria, African sleeping sickness
  • Cryptococcus, toxoplasmosis gondii
  • Severe immunocompromise (e.g. AIDS) severely increases the risk
  • Visiting endemic regions is the primary risk factor for specific parasitic and bacterial causes

The most common cause of viral encephalitis is HSV; and the most common cause of viral meningitis is enteroviruses (e.g. Coxsackie virus)

Clinical Features

Viral Encephalitis

Typically acute onset of:

  • Fever – hallmark sign
  • Altered mental status (e.g. lethargy, drowsiness, disorientation, confusion, reduced consciousness)
  • Change in personality, behaviour, cognitive
  • New-onset seizures (seen in 1/3 HSV encephalitis cases)
  • New focal neurological deficits

Meningitis vs encephalitis:

  • Meningitis = inflammation of the meninges
    • Classically causes headache, fever, neck stiffness/meningism and photophobia
    • Consciousness may be normal early, but can become reduced in severe disease
  • Encephalitis = inflammation of the brain parenchyma
    • Classically causes “brain dysfunction” features: altered behaviour, confusion, personality change, seizures, focal neurology or reduced consciousness

Autoimmune Encephalitis

Autoimmune encephalitis often presents more subacute (over weeks or months) and is strongly associated with:

  • Fever is more likely to be absent
  • Intractable seizures
  • Faciobrachial dystonic seizures (brief arm and face spasms)
  • Movement disorders (e.g. choreoathetosis, orofacial dyskinesia)

Investigation and Diagnosis

Standard Work-Up

Initial tests:

  • Blood culture
  • White blood cell count, CRP
  • Blood glucose (important for CSF analysis)
  • HIV test

1st line investigation: lumbar puncture

  • CSF PCR (specifically for HSV-1, HSV-2, VZV, and enteroviruses) – most important
  • Typical CSF analyses (opening pressure, white cell count and differential, red cell count, protein and glucose, bacterial microscopy and culture)

Do NOT perform a lumbar puncture if there are signs of raised ICP or possible space-occupying lesion, as it increases the risk of brain herniation.

In such cases, perform urgent neuroimaging (usually CT head) prior to a lumbar puncture

  • Lumbar puncture is only safe to perform if imaging shows no structural contraindications (e.g. mass effect, midline shift, impending herniation)
  • However, a normal CT does not automatically make lumbar puncture safe, the decision should be made with senior clinical input

Gold standard (all patients): MRI brain

  • Abnormal in ~90% cases of HSV encephalitis within 48 hours of admission
  • Classic MRI findings in HSV encephalitis: hyperintensity and gyral oedema localised to the medial temporal lobes and cingulate gyrus
  • Autoimmune encephalitis can yield a normal MRI, or discrete, often bilateral high signals in the hippocampus and medial temporal lobes

CSF Analysis

Typical CSF pattern in viral encephalitis:

  • ↑ White cell count, predominantly lymphocytes
  • Protein: normal to mildly or moderately elevated
  • Glucose: normal
  • Opening pressure: normal to moderately elevated
  • Appearance: normal (“gin clear”)

Cause-specific CSF patterns:

  • HSV encephalitis can be haemorrhagic: ~50% cases have ↑ red cell count in the CSF
  • Autoimmune encephalitis would have -ve CSF PCR

Further Investigations

If autoimmune encephalitis is suspected:

  • Paired serum and CSF antibody testing
  • Hyponatraemia is associated with autoimmune encephalitis

Other tests:

  •  EEG – if there is seizure activity or changes in behaviour where it is difficult to distinguish between organic and psychiatric causes
  • Repeat lumbar puncture 24-48 hours after – if the first result is -ve for HSV but clinical suspicion remains (initial PCR can sometimes be falsely -ve in early illness)
  • Brain biopsy – last resort

Management

Viral Encephalitis

1st line immediate empirical management: IV aciclovir

  • Start empirically if viral encephalitis is suspected, especially to cover HSV/VZV
  • If HSV or VZV encephalitis is confirmed → continue treatment

Routine corticosteroids are NOT recommended unless advised by a specialist.

Autoimmune Encephalitis

Management is less standardised than viral encephalitis and should be guided by a specialist.

Key acute management:

  • 1st line therapy: high-dose corticosteroids
  • If the patient is acutely unwell or not improving → IVIG or plasma exchange

Long-term management:

  • Whole-body tumour screening with CT TAP or PET (e.g. ovarian teratoma for NMDAR encephalitis)
  • Tumour removal if an associated tumour is identified
  • Long-term immunosuppression (e.g. azathioprine) may be required for NMDAR encephalitis as relapse can occur in ~30% cases
    • VGKC-complex encephalitis is typically monophasic, and relapse is uncommon, so a tapering steroid dose over 12 months is typically sufficient

References

Related Articles

Meningitis

Brain Abscess

Genital Herpes

Oral Herpes

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