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Cryptococcal Meningitis
Aka: Cryptococcal Meningitis, Cryptococcal Meningoencephalitis
- See Also
- Headache in HIV
- Neurologic Manifestations of HIV
- Focal Brain Lesion in HIV
- HIV Complications
- AIDS-Defining Illness
- Etiology
- Cryptococcus neoformans (fungal infection)
- Epidemiology
- Incidence
- United States: 2-7 cases per 1000 AIDS patients
- Worldwide: 1 Million cases annually (especially sub-Sahara Africa)
- Risk Factors
- Consider in all at risk and known HIV patients with Headache
- Advanced HIV (AIDS)
- CD4 < 50 to 100 cells per mm3 or
- AIDS-Defining Illness
- Symptoms
- Insidious onset
- Typically starts as occult, asymptomatic infection in 50% of cases
- Symptoms are often nonspecific at onset
- Headache (91%)
- Weight Loss (90%)
- Fever (52%)
- Altered Level of Consciousness or confusion
- Signs
- Fever (91%)
- Muscle wasting (90%)
- Motor weakness (40%)
- Cranial Nerve palsy (29%)
- Hearing Loss
- Vision Loss (Optic Neuritis related)
- May progress within 12 hours following onset of Optic Neuritis
- Organ Involvement
- Neurologic involvement (Meningitis) (85-90%)
- Lung or skin involvement (25%)
- Precautions
- Do not rely on lack of meningismus (meningeal signs) to exclude Cryptococcal Meningitis
- Meningeal signs are only present in one quarter of Cryptococcal Meninigitis
- Evaluation
- Headache in HIV
- Labs
- Blood Cultures positive (>75%)
- Serum cryptococcal Antigen positive (98%)
- High titer (>1024:1)
- CSF Exam
- Glucose usually normal
- Protein mildly elevated
- White Blood Cell Count usually less than 20
- India Ink stain usually shows organism
- Cryptococcal Ag test (>95% sensitive, specific)
- Increased CSF Opening Pressure
- Typically CSF Opening Pressure >350 mm H2O
- Results from high fungal burden in CNS interfering with CSF reabsorption
- Risk of obstructrive Hydrocephalus presenting as cognitive deficit and ataxic gait
- High pressure responsible for adverse sequelae
- Treat with serial LPs, lumbar drain or VP Shunt
- Differential diagnosis (other causes of increased CSF Opening Pressure in HIV)
- Toxoplasma Encephalitis
- CNS Lymphoma
- Tuberculous Meningitis
- Management: Acute (CNS and extraneural involvement)
- Amphotericin B (High dose): 0.7 mg/kg/day
- Flucytosine (100 mg/kg/day) may be added
- Fluconazole (200 to 400 mg/day) Indications
- Normal Mental Status at baseline
- Time to sterilization of CSF is slower
- Prefer amphotericin B (short course first)
- Avoid harmful measures
- Avoid Dexamethasone
- Associated with increased mortality
- Beardsley (2016) N Engl J Med 374(6): 542-4 +PMID: 26863355 [PubMed]
- Management: Prophylaxis
- General
- Relapse occurs in >80% if no suppression given
- Fluconazole 200 mg/day
- Prognosis
- Uniformly fatal if left untreated
- Overall Mortality: 12%
- References
- Perkins (2013) Crit Dec Emerg Med 27(3): 2-9
- Friedmann (1995) Arch Intern Med 155(20): 2231-7 [PubMed]
- Mwaba (2001) Postgrad Med J 77(814): 769-73 [PubMed]