Bacterial meningitis differential diagnosis
Bacterial meningitis Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
Treatment |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Aysha Anwar, M.B.B.S[2]
Overview
Differential diagnosis
Differentiating bacterial meningitis from other causes of meningitis
Cerebrospinal Fluid | |||||
Normal Levels | Acute Bacterial M. | Acute Viral M. | TB M. | Neuroborreliosis | |
Cells/ul | < 5 | In the 1000s | In the 100s | In the 100s | Some 100 |
Cells | Lymph:Monos 7:3 | Gran. > Lymph. | Lymph. > Gran. | Various leukos | Lymph. monocytic |
Total Protein (mg/dl) | 45-60 | Typically 100-500 | Typically normal | Typically 100-200 | Typically up to 350 |
Glucose Ratio (CSF/plasma) | Typically > 0.5 | < 0.3 | > 0.6 | < 0.5 | Normal |
Lactate (mmol/l) | < 2.1 | > 2.1 | < 2.1 | > 2.1 | - |
Others | ICP: 6-22 (cm H2O) | PCR of HSV-DNA | PCR of TBC-DNA | IgG/IgM CSF/Serum Ratio |