1) A 35-year-old man presented to the emergency room with suicidal attempts, agitation, and altered mental status four days after initially developing fever and cough from a COVID-19 infection three weeks prior.
2) He was admitted to the psychiatry hospital and developed fever, tongue biting, and elevated CK levels. MRI brain showed bilateral temporal lobe abnormalities.
3) He was diagnosed with post-COVID-19 encephalitis and treated empirically with antivirals, antibiotics, and supportive care. He eventually had complete resolution of symptoms and was discharged after 10 days.
The document presents a seminar on encephalitis, defining it as inflammation of the brain and describing its main types, causes, symptoms, diagnostic tests, treatment including pharmacological and nursing management, complications, and prevention methods. Encephalitis is usually caused by a viral infection but can also be caused by bacteria, and symptoms may include fever, headache, nausea, and confusion.
Encephalitis is an inflammation of the brain that is commonly caused by viral infections. It can cause symptoms like fever, headache, confusion, seizures, and neurological deficits as the brain tissue deteriorates. Diagnosis involves lumbar puncture to analyze CSF for signs of inflammation and PCR or antibody tests to identify the specific virus. Treatment focuses on managing symptoms, reducing fever and swelling, and using antiviral medications for viral causes. Nursing care involves frequent monitoring, preventing complications, managing aberrant behaviors, and providing supportive care and patient education.
Encephalitis is an inflammation of the brain that is commonly caused by viral infections. It can cause symptoms like fever, headache, confusion, seizures, and neurological deficits as the brain tissue deteriorates. Diagnosis involves lumbar puncture to analyze CSF for signs of inflammation and PCR or antibody tests to identify the specific virus. Treatment focuses on managing symptoms, reducing fever and swelling, and using antiviral medications for viral causes. Nursing care involves frequent monitoring, preventing complications, managing aberrant behaviors, and providing supportive care and patient education.
This case report describes a 13-year-old boy who presented with headache, vomiting, and fever and was diagnosed with meningitis. After two days, he developed seizures and impaired consciousness. MRI showed lesions in multiple areas of the brain. A follow up MRI months later showed the lesions had completely resolved. He was diagnosed with reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS), likely caused by severe hypertension. RPLS is characterized by reversible brain lesions and is associated with conditions that cause abrupt changes in blood pressure. The patient's symptoms improved with blood pressure control and he made a full recovery.
This document provides guidance on the management of acute encephalitis. It defines encephalitis and related terms. The causes of acute encephalitis syndrome are discussed, including various viral, bacterial, and non-infectious etiologies. Signs and symptoms as well as clues from physical examination are outlined. A 6-step approach to evaluation and management is then described: 1) rapid assessment and stabilization, 2) clinical evaluation, 3) investigations such as CSF analysis and imaging, 4) empirical treatment, 5) supportive care and treatment, and 6) managing complications and rehabilitation. Key challenges in management are also reviewed.
This document provides information on the management of acute encephalitis. It begins by defining encephalitis, meningoencephalitis, and acute encephalitis syndrome. It then discusses the causes of AES which can be viral encephalitis, acute pyogenic meningitis, tuberculosis meningitis, cerebral malaria, or acute disseminated encephalomyelitis. The document outlines the evaluation and management process in 6 steps: rapid assessment and stabilization, clinical evaluation, investigations, empirical treatment, supportive care and treatment, and prevention of complications. It provides details on specific viral, bacterial, and non-infectious causes as well as recommendations on prevention and vaccination.
1) This case report describes a 9-year old girl who developed acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) following an Epstein-Barr virus infection.
2) She initially presented with upper respiratory tract symptoms and a rash, which subsided, but then neurological symptoms developed including headache, vomiting, fever, confusion and seizures.
3) MRI imaging showed widespread white matter lesions characteristic of ADEM. She was treated with intravenous immunoglobulin and steroids and made a full recovery over 6 weeks.
The document describes a case of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) in a 12-year-old male who presented with pain and weakness in his lower limbs. On examination, he had hypotonia, hyporeflexia, and reduced motor strength in both upper and lower limbs. Guillain-Barr辿 syndrome (GBS) is the most common cause of AFP and involves demyelination of peripheral nerves due to autoimmune attack. Key diagnostic features of GBS are rapid onset of symmetric ascending paralysis, intact sensation, absence of fever or cranial nerve involvement, and albuminocytologic dissociation on CSF analysis. Treatment involves hospitalization, IV immunoglobulin or plasmapher
Definition
Epidemiology
Etiology
Pathophysiology
Classification
Diagnosis
Treatment
Anti Seizure Drugs Prices in Jordan
Two Medical cases
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This document discusses acute encephalitis syndrome. It defines encephalitis as an acute inflammatory process involving brain tissue and meningoencephalitis as inflammation of both the meninges and brain tissue. Japanese encephalitis is identified as one of the most common causes of acute encephalitis syndrome. It is a mosquito-borne viral infection spread between pigs and birds as amplifying hosts, with humans as incidental hosts. The clinical presentation involves an initial prodromal stage of fever and headache, followed by an encephalitic stage with altered mental status such as confusion or coma. Treatment involves supportive care and empiric antiviral therapy with acyclovir and antibiotics until causative organisms are identified.
This document discusses CNS infections such as meningitis and encephalitis in children. It begins by defining these conditions and noting that they are common serious problems in pediatric practice that can cause death or neurological sequelae. It then differentiates between meningitis, encephalitis, and other CNS infections based on clinical presentation and causative organisms. The document provides guidance on diagnosing CNS infections through clinical manifestations, CSF examination, and other tests. It also outlines potential complications like death, blindness, deafness, and neurological sequelae. Finally, it discusses management of different CNS infections through appropriate antibiotic therapy and monitoring for complications.
This document provides an overview of encephalitis, including definitions, etiology, common causes in Bangladesh, clinical presentation, investigations, management, and prognosis. It discusses several specific types of encephalitis in more detail such as Japanese encephalitis, herpes simplex encephalitis, dengue encephalitis, chikungunya encephalitis, and brainstem encephalitis. Japanese encephalitis is a leading cause of viral encephalitis in Bangladesh. Herpes simplex encephalitis is the most common and severe form of sporadic encephalitis worldwide. Dengue and chikungunya viruses can also cause neurological complications including encephalitis.
1. There are several types of central nervous system (CNS) infections that can occur in children including meningitis, encephalitis, and brain abscess.
2. Clinical diagnosis is based on symptoms of acute infection as well as neurological findings including altered consciousness, convulsions, signs of meningeal irritation, and lateralizing signs.
3. Diagnosis is confirmed through cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination and other tests such as blood tests and brain imaging. CSF findings differ between bacterial meningitis, viral meningitis, viral encephalitis, and tuberculous meningitis.
Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder characterized by repeated epileptic seizures caused by abnormal neuronal discharges in the brain. It affects people of all ages worldwide, with over 50 million cases globally. Epilepsy has various causes including brain injury, infection, or genetic predisposition. Seizures can be generalized, affecting the whole brain, or partial, localized to one area. Diagnosis involves a medical history, examination, and tests like EEG or MRI. Treatment includes anti-seizure medications, surgery, dietary therapies, and devices like VNS. Future approaches may include radiosurgery to potentially replace invasive surgery.
Management of Unconscious patients are one of the most difficult task to undertake. It emanate from striking out the cause of the condition and with the definitive management. The laboratory test to conduct also bring out a key results not even talking of the thorough clinical examination on the patient. This has called for the need to update knowledge around such cases to limit fatalities in managing such cases.
This case summary describes a 4-year-old male child who presented with cough, cold, fever, and seizure followed by altered sensorium for 15 days prior to admission. He had been hospitalized for 15 days at a private hospital where he was on mechanical ventilation for 10 days and received a tracheostomy tube. Testing showed normal CBC, SE, CSF study, viral markers, CSF NMDA receptor study, and MRI. He received multiple antiepileptics and steroids with some improvement in condition but remained dependent on the tracheostomy tube. The summary discusses various types and causes of encephalitis including autoimmune encephalitis such as anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis, LGI1 encephalitis
Neuropsychiatry and Behavioral Aspect of HIV spectrum Disease Heba Essawy, MD
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This document describes a study to evaluate neurocognitive impairment in HIV patients. The study will assess patients using standard demographic, medical, neurological and neuropsychological evaluations. The neuropsychological battery will evaluate 5 domains: concentration/processing speed; mental flexibility; memory; fine motor skills; and visuospatial abilities. Tests will include trails, digit span, stroop, rey figures, and grooved pegboard. The goal is to better diagnose HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders and understand their impact on quality of life and antiretroviral adherence.
This document provides information about epilepsy, including its definition, types of seizures, causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment and classification of antiepileptic drugs. Some key points:
- Epilepsy is a chronic neurological condition characterized by recurrent seizures. Seizures have focal or generalized onset in the brain.
- Common causes include genetic factors, brain injury, infections, tumors and metabolic imbalances. Symptoms vary depending on the seizure type and location in the brain.
- Diagnosis involves patient history, physical exam, EEG, imaging and lab tests. Treatment involves antiepileptic drugs to reduce seizures, with drug choices based on seizure type.
- Major antiepileptic drug classes work
This document discusses altered mental status and provides information on understanding consciousness, conducting an examination of a patient with impaired consciousness, generating a differential diagnosis, and considering various etiologies that can cause altered mental status including focal brain lesions, diffuse brain injuries, infections, toxicities, and metabolic derangements. Three clinical cases are presented and specific conditions such as hypoxia, hypoglycemia, and hepatic encephalopathy are discussed in further detail.
Central Nervous System, Epilepsy, Parkinson, Alzheimer, Stroke and Migraine.Dr. Kiran Dhamak
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This document provides information on various neurological infections. It discusses meningitis, defining it as an inflammation of the membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord. It notes that meningitis can be caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi or other toxins. It also discusses types of meningitis such as bacterial, viral, and chronic meningitis. Additionally, it covers encephalitis, defining it as an inflammation of the brain tissue and membranes. It notes various causes of encephalitis and discusses associated clinical manifestations and treatment approaches.
This document provides an overview of epilepsy, including:
- The distinction between seizures and epilepsy and different seizure types.
- Epidemiology showing epilepsy prevalence of 0.5-1% and incidence of 40-70 per 100,000 people per year.
- The International League Against Epilepsy classification of seizure types including partial, generalized, and unclassified seizures.
- Descriptions of common seizure types like simple partial, complex partial, absence, myoclonic, and tonic-clonic seizures.
- Diagnostic steps for epilepsy including history, EEG, imaging, and long-term monitoring.
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This document provides an overview of consciousness and approaches to disturbances of consciousness such as coma. It defines key terms like coma, stupor, and delirium. Coma can be caused by structural brain insults, metabolic derangements, infections, drugs or toxins. The clinical approach involves stabilizing vital functions, assessing severity using scales like Glasgow Coma Scale, and evaluating for immediate life-threatening causes through diagnostic tests and empirical treatment when needed to prevent further brain damage. A thorough neurological exam evaluates factors like consciousness level, pupil size and reactivity, ocular motility, motor responses and more to localize the cause. Distinguishing features between toxic/metabolic vs. structural comas are discussed.
Definition
Epidemiology
Etiology
Pathophysiology
Classification
Diagnosis
Treatment
Anti Seizure Drugs Prices in Jordan
Two Medical cases
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This document discusses acute encephalitis syndrome. It defines encephalitis as an acute inflammatory process involving brain tissue and meningoencephalitis as inflammation of both the meninges and brain tissue. Japanese encephalitis is identified as one of the most common causes of acute encephalitis syndrome. It is a mosquito-borne viral infection spread between pigs and birds as amplifying hosts, with humans as incidental hosts. The clinical presentation involves an initial prodromal stage of fever and headache, followed by an encephalitic stage with altered mental status such as confusion or coma. Treatment involves supportive care and empiric antiviral therapy with acyclovir and antibiotics until causative organisms are identified.
This document discusses CNS infections such as meningitis and encephalitis in children. It begins by defining these conditions and noting that they are common serious problems in pediatric practice that can cause death or neurological sequelae. It then differentiates between meningitis, encephalitis, and other CNS infections based on clinical presentation and causative organisms. The document provides guidance on diagnosing CNS infections through clinical manifestations, CSF examination, and other tests. It also outlines potential complications like death, blindness, deafness, and neurological sequelae. Finally, it discusses management of different CNS infections through appropriate antibiotic therapy and monitoring for complications.
This document provides an overview of encephalitis, including definitions, etiology, common causes in Bangladesh, clinical presentation, investigations, management, and prognosis. It discusses several specific types of encephalitis in more detail such as Japanese encephalitis, herpes simplex encephalitis, dengue encephalitis, chikungunya encephalitis, and brainstem encephalitis. Japanese encephalitis is a leading cause of viral encephalitis in Bangladesh. Herpes simplex encephalitis is the most common and severe form of sporadic encephalitis worldwide. Dengue and chikungunya viruses can also cause neurological complications including encephalitis.
1. There are several types of central nervous system (CNS) infections that can occur in children including meningitis, encephalitis, and brain abscess.
2. Clinical diagnosis is based on symptoms of acute infection as well as neurological findings including altered consciousness, convulsions, signs of meningeal irritation, and lateralizing signs.
3. Diagnosis is confirmed through cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination and other tests such as blood tests and brain imaging. CSF findings differ between bacterial meningitis, viral meningitis, viral encephalitis, and tuberculous meningitis.
Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder characterized by repeated epileptic seizures caused by abnormal neuronal discharges in the brain. It affects people of all ages worldwide, with over 50 million cases globally. Epilepsy has various causes including brain injury, infection, or genetic predisposition. Seizures can be generalized, affecting the whole brain, or partial, localized to one area. Diagnosis involves a medical history, examination, and tests like EEG or MRI. Treatment includes anti-seizure medications, surgery, dietary therapies, and devices like VNS. Future approaches may include radiosurgery to potentially replace invasive surgery.
Management of Unconscious patients are one of the most difficult task to undertake. It emanate from striking out the cause of the condition and with the definitive management. The laboratory test to conduct also bring out a key results not even talking of the thorough clinical examination on the patient. This has called for the need to update knowledge around such cases to limit fatalities in managing such cases.
This case summary describes a 4-year-old male child who presented with cough, cold, fever, and seizure followed by altered sensorium for 15 days prior to admission. He had been hospitalized for 15 days at a private hospital where he was on mechanical ventilation for 10 days and received a tracheostomy tube. Testing showed normal CBC, SE, CSF study, viral markers, CSF NMDA receptor study, and MRI. He received multiple antiepileptics and steroids with some improvement in condition but remained dependent on the tracheostomy tube. The summary discusses various types and causes of encephalitis including autoimmune encephalitis such as anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis, LGI1 encephalitis
Neuropsychiatry and Behavioral Aspect of HIV spectrum Disease Heba Essawy, MD
油
This document describes a study to evaluate neurocognitive impairment in HIV patients. The study will assess patients using standard demographic, medical, neurological and neuropsychological evaluations. The neuropsychological battery will evaluate 5 domains: concentration/processing speed; mental flexibility; memory; fine motor skills; and visuospatial abilities. Tests will include trails, digit span, stroop, rey figures, and grooved pegboard. The goal is to better diagnose HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders and understand their impact on quality of life and antiretroviral adherence.
This document provides information about epilepsy, including its definition, types of seizures, causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment and classification of antiepileptic drugs. Some key points:
- Epilepsy is a chronic neurological condition characterized by recurrent seizures. Seizures have focal or generalized onset in the brain.
- Common causes include genetic factors, brain injury, infections, tumors and metabolic imbalances. Symptoms vary depending on the seizure type and location in the brain.
- Diagnosis involves patient history, physical exam, EEG, imaging and lab tests. Treatment involves antiepileptic drugs to reduce seizures, with drug choices based on seizure type.
- Major antiepileptic drug classes work
This document discusses altered mental status and provides information on understanding consciousness, conducting an examination of a patient with impaired consciousness, generating a differential diagnosis, and considering various etiologies that can cause altered mental status including focal brain lesions, diffuse brain injuries, infections, toxicities, and metabolic derangements. Three clinical cases are presented and specific conditions such as hypoxia, hypoglycemia, and hepatic encephalopathy are discussed in further detail.
Central Nervous System, Epilepsy, Parkinson, Alzheimer, Stroke and Migraine.Dr. Kiran Dhamak
油
Central Nervous System is one of the unit in Pharmacotherapeutics Subject which is for Second Year Diploma in Pharmacy. The unit covers diseases like Epilepsy, Parkinson, Alzheimer, Stroke and Migraine. The presentation includes the point as per diploma in pharmacy students may understand very easily. The syllabus is framed by Pharmacy Council of India which is implemented by MSBTE ER 2020-2021
This document provides information on various neurological infections. It discusses meningitis, defining it as an inflammation of the membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord. It notes that meningitis can be caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi or other toxins. It also discusses types of meningitis such as bacterial, viral, and chronic meningitis. Additionally, it covers encephalitis, defining it as an inflammation of the brain tissue and membranes. It notes various causes of encephalitis and discusses associated clinical manifestations and treatment approaches.
This document provides an overview of epilepsy, including:
- The distinction between seizures and epilepsy and different seizure types.
- Epidemiology showing epilepsy prevalence of 0.5-1% and incidence of 40-70 per 100,000 people per year.
- The International League Against Epilepsy classification of seizure types including partial, generalized, and unclassified seizures.
- Descriptions of common seizure types like simple partial, complex partial, absence, myoclonic, and tonic-clonic seizures.
- Diagnostic steps for epilepsy including history, EEG, imaging, and long-term monitoring.
Approach to disturbance of consciousnessOsama Ragab
油
This document provides an overview of consciousness and approaches to disturbances of consciousness such as coma. It defines key terms like coma, stupor, and delirium. Coma can be caused by structural brain insults, metabolic derangements, infections, drugs or toxins. The clinical approach involves stabilizing vital functions, assessing severity using scales like Glasgow Coma Scale, and evaluating for immediate life-threatening causes through diagnostic tests and empirical treatment when needed to prevent further brain damage. A thorough neurological exam evaluates factors like consciousness level, pupil size and reactivity, ocular motility, motor responses and more to localize the cause. Distinguishing features between toxic/metabolic vs. structural comas are discussed.
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Acase of patient with COVID-19 infection with suicidal [Autosaved].pptx
1. POST COVID-19 ENCEPHALITIS PRESENTED
INITIALLY BY SUICIDAL ATTEMPT
CASE REPORT AND LESSON LEARNED
Presented by :
Khaled gamal kotb, psychiatric resident
Ebrahim adel Khalil, psychiatric resident
UNDER SUPERVISION OF
Ehab Elbaz, M.D
Consultant psychiatrist
Director of psychiatry hospital, MMMC
2. INTRODUCTION
COVID 19 pandemic has reshaped the world as we previously know it
It is primarily a respiratory tract infection , but also has a neuropsychiatric
presentation which is not understood completely
As the pandemic continued, we experienced a wide variety of neuropsychiatric
clinical presentation that is unusual
In this case report, we report the initial presentation with suicide for a man with a
recent history of COVID 19 infection
3. CASE PRESENTATION:
On 17th April 2021, a 35 years old, accountant ,who live in cairo, non smoker ,no history of
substance abuse and no past history of medical importance presented to our ER department
with suicidal attempt ,altered mental status and agitation of acute onset progressive course
starting 4 days ago,
Informant complaint (His wife) :
4 days ago he became aggressive with insomnia with suicidal attempt trying to jump from 3rd
floor, she reported that he had fever and cough 3 weeks ago and nasal swab PCR for COVID-
19 done and result was +ve for covid-19 infection and he was isolated at home with treatment
azithromycin and paracetamol
4. Patient in ER was vitally stable with no fever
Neurological consultation done in ER :patient GCS 15/15 with no neurological abnormalities
detected , MRI brain done on same day with no abnormal findings. for psychiatric
consultation
MSE in ER :
General appearance and behavior: Adult male, average body built ,average grooming
,hyperactive with agitation
Thinking and speech : incoherent speech with pressure of speech
Mood and affect: dysphoric congruent with affect
Cognitive functions: patient is confused not orientd and inattentive
For admission at psychiatry hospital .
5. On 1st day of admission he became more agitated he recived 2 ampules Haloperidol 5
mg and Midazolam 5 mg im
on 2nd day of admission patient developed fever 38c and tongue bitting with no
recorded fits
Laboratory investigations were done on 1st Day after admission & were in normal range
except CK 1716
CT chest revealed biletral ground glass opacities
nasal swab pcr ve
6. following medications Haloperidol 5mg ampules 2x2 im and olanzapine sublingual 1x2
started after admission to psychiatric department on 1st 2 then ttt discontinued and started
Midazolam 5mg 1x2
then patient was transferred to neuro ICU
there intravenous fluids was initiated and Midazolam iv twice daily
Acyclovir 750 Iv started empirically before Obtaining cerebrospinal fluid results
Bromocriptine 2.5mg 1x3 and dantrolene
Antibiotics started in icu Meropenem 1gm vial 1x3 and linezolid 600mg 1x2
7. On 24th April Patient developed vomiting All over the day and the day after and controlled
by anti emetics
MRI brain done on same day showing biletral temporal lobe T2 hyperintensity
CSF analysis showing Increase Protein 119 N:23-38 mgdl Glucose 75 N:45-85 LDH 12
N:<5 cells
Patient became eventually full conscious, alert and coherent with normal cognitive
function With a complete resolution of his agitation after 10 days of admission
Patient discharged On 1st May on acyclovir 750mg oral 1x3 and pantoperazole 40mg 1x1
with advice for follow up outpatient after 2 weeks And 1 month rest from his work
9. INTRODUCTION
(COVID-19) caused by the new coronavirus (severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2
[SARS-CoV-2]) in Wuhan, China, in 2019 became a global epidemic in 2020. Although SARS-
CoV-2 causes acute respiratory infections, it is often accompanied by neurological symptoms
such as headache, impaired consciousness, delirium, myopathy, and dyssomnia.
Also, various neurological complications such as cerebral infarction,
encephalitis/encephalopathy, and autoimmune diseases have been reported.
10. POST- VIRAL ENCEPHALITIS
Encephalitis is an inflammation of the active tissues of the brain caused by an infection
or an autoimmune response ,that has been described as a severe neurological
complication of COVID- 19.
Symptoms of encephalitis vary depending on the affected area of the brain.
11. INCIDENCE
the incidence of encephalitis in COVID-19 patients is relatively low (<1%).
But increases significantly to up to 6.7% in severely ill patients, defined as patients
requiring ICU or HDU care.
12. SYMPTOMS
Physical Symptoms
Fever
Seizures
Headache
Movement disorders
Sensitivity to light
Sensitivity to sound
Neck stiffness
Loss of consciousness
Cognitive Symptoms
Excessive sleepiness
Confusion and disorientation
Irritability
Anxiety
Psychosis
Hallucinations
Memory loss
Other behavioral changes
Cognitive impairment
13. In severe cases, encephalitis symptoms may include:
Weakness or partial paralysis in the arms and legs
Double vision
Impairment of speech or hearing
Coma
14. SYMPTOMS DUE TO SPECIFIC TYPES
OF ENCEPHALITIS
A sensation of d辿j vu (the feeling that one is reliving something already experienced) is a
common finding in early stages of herpes simplex virus encephalitis.
A type of autoimmune encephalitis affecting NMDA receptors can start with a flu-like illness. It
can then lead to behavioral changes and unusual movement patterns affecting the mouth and
face, cognitive decline and impaired function of the autonomic nervous system.
Another type of autoimmune encephalitis (LGI1) is associated with seizures or other abnormal
movement of the face or arm.
15. INVESTIGATION
Neuroimaging, such as a brain MRI or CT scan
A lumbar puncture (spinal tap) to check for signs of infection in the brain or spinal cord
Electroencephalogram (EEG) to look for seizures or specific patterns of electrical activity in the
brain
Blood tests or urine and stool tests to identify organisms or antibodies responsible for an infection
16. IMAGING FINDINGS
Common MRI Finding: white matter hyperintensities and hemorrhagic lesions on fluid-
attenuated inversion recovery and T2 sequences.
CT head findings were generally unremarkable.
Electroencephalography (EEG) in some patients showed patterns of general slowing.
Although some patients developed seizures during their clinical course, sharp waves
and epileptiform activity were uncommon findings .
18. ADDITIONAL TESTS
A sputum culture tests the material that is coughed up from the lungs to see if certain infections
are present.
In rare cases, a biopsy of affected brain tissue may be performed to allow for examination under
a microscope.
Intracranial pressure monitorin (ICP)
measures the pressure inside the skull to monitor the brain swelling.
19. TREATMENT
The key to surviving encephalitis is early detection and effective treatment of the
underlying cause. A team of specialists working together is an important factor in optimal
care.
Encephalitis patients might require a stay in the ICU so that health care providers can
watch for seizures, brain swelling, respiratory failure or heart rhythm changes.
20. PROGNOSIS
During the encephalitis attack, the inflamed brain tissue can suffer damage, which varies greatly
between patients. In general, the brain doesnt bounce back as quickly as other body parts such
as bone, skin and muscles, but it does have some capacity to recover.
Mild cases of encephalitis are usually short and result in a full recovery. However, despite
improvements in diagnosis and treatment, encephalitis still leads to death in about 10% of
patients.
Patients who suffer from encephalitis as a complication of COVID-19 have much poorer
outcomes compared to the general population of COVID-19 patients.