ID
HSV Encephalitis
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HSV Encephalitis
, Herpes Simplex Encephalitis
See Also
Neonatal HSV
Encephalitis
Epidemiology
Most common cause of sporadic focal
Encephalitis
(1 per 250,000)
HSV is responsible for 10% of
Encephalitis
cases
Newborns: Onset 2-30 days after delivery
Bimodal distribution of onset
Age under 20 years old (33% of cases)
Age over 50 years old (>50% of cases)
Etiology
Adults
Herpes Simplex Virus
Type I
Herpes Simplex Virus
Type II (rare)
Neonates
See
Neonatal HSV
Perinatal
Herpes Simplex Virus
Type II transmission
Pathophysiology
Encephalitis
(brain inflammation)
HSV Encephalitis causes inflammation,
Hemorrhage
and edema
Results in brain necrosis and liquefaction
Destructive lesions by HSV infection
Inferior
Frontal Lobe
Anterior
Temporal Lobe
Precautions
Fever
,
Headache
and neurologic abnormalities should prompt evaluation for
Encephalitis
Worse outcomes with delayed diagnosis
Cryptic presentations
Skin vessicles may be absent
Nuchal Rigidity
may be absent
Fever
alone may be only presenting finding
Neurologic changes may be subtle (mild behavior change or mild cognitive deficits)
Symptoms
Fever
Headache
Irritability and decreased feeding in newborns
Lethargy
Tremor
s
Focal Seizure
s
Ataxia
Vomiting
Dysphagia
Altered Mental Status
Behavioral changes
Memory changes
Personality Changes
Labs
See
Encephalitis
Lumbar Puncture
for CSF
CSF PCR
for HSV (gold standard)
Test Sensitivity
: 95%
False Negative
s occur in first 12 hours and after 10 days
CSF Cell Count
Test Sensitivity
: 95% for
Pleocytosis
at 10-200 cells
Predominantly
Lymphocytosis
or monocytosis
Xanthochromia
and
Red Blood Cell
s may be present
CSF Protein
Increased to 100 mg/dl in 80% of cases
CSF Glucose
Normal to low
Diagnosis
MRI Head
imaging
MRI is preferred over
CT Head
(
CT Head
is typically normal in first 5 days)
Diffuse edema
Medial temporal and inferior
Frontal Lobe
necrotic changes on imaging
T1 weighted images - hypointensity
T2 weighted images - hyperintensity
Electroencephalogram
(EEG)
Findings localize to frontal and
Temporal Lobe
Periodic sharp wave activity temporally
Background of focal or diffuse slowing
Management
See
Encephalitis
Acyclovir
Dose (adjust for decreased
Renal Function
)
Age under 12 years: 20 mg/kg IV every 8 hours
Age over 12 years: 12.5 mg/kg IV every 8 hours
Duration: 14-21 days (or until HSV Encephalitis is excluded)
Directions: Give dose over 60 minutes
Start early, empirically, as soon as diagnosis is considered possible, to maximize best possible outcome
Initially,
Acyclovir
is also added to meningitis
Antibiotic
regimen until HSV Encephalitis is excluded
Complications
Dementia
Personality Disorder
Memory Loss
Aphasia
Prognosis
Mortality: 10-40%
Acyclovir
has reduced mortality from >70% to <20%
High risk of severe residual neurologic deficit
References
Claudius in Majoewsky (2012) EM:Rap 12(11): 7-8
Fuchs and Yamamoto (2012) APLS, Jones and Bartlett, Burlington, p. 180-3
Herbert and Jhun in Herbert (2014) EM:Rap 14(12):12
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