According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, developing countries have a higher incidence of meningitis than that in developed countries.
The African meningitis belt is an area that extends from Senegal to Ethiopia where meningitis occurs in periodic epidemics. One reason for this is that developing countries have less access to preventive measures, such as vaccination.
The World Health Organization reports that 900,000 cases of meningitis occurred in the 26 countries along the African meningitis belt between 1995 and 2014. According to the organization, 10% of these cases were fatal, while 10-20% resulted in lasting neurological complications.
Meningitis is an infection that causes inflammation of the protective membranes covering the brain and spinal cord.
The inflammation can result from three types of infectious agents, bacteria, viruses, or fungi. Sometimes, the diseases can be the result of noninfectious agents that include chemical reactions, drug allergies, some types of cancer and inflammatory diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus.
Several risk factors, such as age, can increases the chance of developing meningitis, but people with a weakened immune system are at the highest risk.
When the infected agent finds its way to the brain, the blood-brain barrier is disrupted and infection-fighting particles start to enter the meninges and brain, leading to swelling.
The common symptoms of meningitis include fever, headache, and stiff neck. other symptoms may appear, including nausea, vomiting, sensitivity to light, and confusion. Newborns and infants who have meningitis may not show the previously mentioned symptoms, as they may suffer from irritability, vomiting, loss of appetite, soft spot on the infant’s head, and abnormal reflexes.
Cases of meningitis can vary from mild to severe. In mild cases, the patient usually recovers within days by following proper treatment, but severe cases can become life-threatening.
Diagnostic tests used to identify meningitis include blood cultures, ultrasound, and spinal tap.
Some forms of meningitis are preventable through vaccines and following good hygiene practices.
Meningitis is spread worldwide. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, developing countries have a higher incidence of meningitis than that in developed countries. The African meningitis belt is an area where meningitis breaks in periodic epidemics.
Meningitis is an inflammation of the meninges, the membranes that surround and protect the brain and spinal cord. Meningitis is usually caused by an infectious agent, bacteria for example, that infects the fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord and leads to the swelling that causes the symptoms.
There are three common types of meningitis categorized according to the infections agent causing each type. These types are bacterial meningitis, viral meningitis, and fungal meningitis. Noninfectious meningitis is another type that can be caused by the body’s immune reaction to a noninfectious agent, such as certain drugs.
There are three types of organisms that can infect the fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord and lead to meningitis, followed by bacterial infections and, infrequently, fungal infections.
Listeria monocytogenes (listeria): People with a compromised immune system, such as pregnant women, newborns and older adults are more susceptible to listeria infections. Listeria is invasive and can pass the placental barrier.
Meningitis can sometimes result from noninfectious causes, such as chemical reactions, drug allergies, some types of cancer and inflammatory diseases, such as sarcoidosis; these can cause an immune response leading to inflammation of the meninges.
Immunocompromised people are at a higher risk of developing any type of infectious meningitis. Other risk factors are divided according to the pathogen:
Meninges produce a barrier between the bloodstream and the brain to protect the brain from the body’s immune system. In normal cases this barrier prevents the immune system from attacking the brain. In meningitis, the blood-brain barrier becomes disrupted. When the infected agent finds its way to the brain, the body starts to fight the infection and the blood vessels start to leak fluid, white blood cells, and other infection-fighting particles that enter the meninges and brain. As a result of this process, the brain becomes swelled and blood flow may diminish parts of the brain. In severe cases of bacterial meningitis, the blood-brain barrier is breached, leading to widespread cortical destruction.
Most cases of meningitis are caused by an infectious agent that colonizes or establishes a localized infection in another place in the host. Potential sites of infection include the skin, the nasopharynx, the respiratory tract, the gastrointestinal tract, and the genitourinary tract. An infectious agent can gain access to the central nervous system and cause meningeal disease via any of the three following major pathways:
The signs and symptoms of meningitis may include:
In newborns and infants, the main symptoms of meningitis are absent or not easy to notice. The infant becomes irritable and may vomit and lose its appetite. In young infants, doctors look for a soft spot on the infant’s head or look for abnormal reflexes.
Doctors analyze the medical history of the patient and perform the following test to diagnose meningitis:
The treatment of meningitis depends on the cause:
Most cases of viral meningitis resolve within 7 to 10 days. In some cases, corticosteroids are used to decrease swelling in the brain, and anticonvulsants are used to control seizures. If meningitis is caused by the herpes virus, antiviral medication may be used. If the case becomes severe, the patient should be hospitalized.
Left untreated, meningitis can lead to serious complications due to permanent neurological damage that include:
Other complications related to meningitis may arise from infection spreading in the body. These complications include:
The methods used to prevent meningitis are classified according the cause:
Bacterial meningitis: Vaccination is the most effective method to defend against certain types of bacterial meningitis. People should follow their vaccines schedule. Vaccines that help prevent bacterial meningitis include:
Vaccines do not offer a 100% protection against these bacteria, and do not protect against all types of bacteria, so there is still a chance to develop bacterial meningitis even with vaccination. Maintaining good health practices may help in preventing bacterial meningitis, these practices include:
Pregnant women in 35 to 37 weeks of pregnancy should get tested for group B Streptococcus test; if the test result is positive, the pregnant woman must take antibiotics during labor in order to prevent group B Streptococcus from passing to their newborn. To reduce the risk of meningitis caused by Listeria monocytogenes, pregnant women should avoid certain foods, including:
Viral meningitis: Vaccinations are available for some diseases that can lead to viral meningitis, such as measles, mumps, chickenpox, and influenza. Vaccination are not available for non-polio enteroviruses, which are the most common cause of viral meningitis. Following good hygienic practices are helpful in decreasing the probability of getting infected with non-polio enteroviruses, these practices include:
- Fungal meningitis: There’s no specific measure to protect against fungal meningitis, but keeping away from soil and other environments that are likely to contain fungus may help reduce the chance. Immunocompromised people should try to avoid bird droppings and avoid digging, particularly if they live in a geographic region where fungi like Histoplasma, Coccidioides, or Blastomyces exist.
Patients with meningitis who have a decreased level of consciousness or have seizures accompanying the disease, especially if seizures extend for a long period of time or are difficult to control, are at higher risk for neurologic disability or death.
In bacterial meningitis, different risk factors are related with the prognosis of patient status. These factors include the following variables related to a bad clinical outcome:
Half of all patients with bacterial meningitis develop several complications within days to weeks after infection happens; these complications can lead to brain damage, coma, and death.
In viral meningitis, patients usually recover within 7 to 10 days on their own.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, developing countries have a higher incidence of meningitis than that in developed countries.
The African meningitis belt is an area that extends from Senegal to Ethiopia where meningitis occurs in periodic epidemics. One reason for this is that developing countries have less access to preventive measures, such as vaccination.
The World Health Organization reports that 900,000 cases of meningitis occurred in the 26 countries along the African meningitis belt between 1995 and 2014. According to the organization, 10% of these cases were fatal, while 10-20% resulted in lasting neurological complications.