Central Nervous System Infection
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The “Point prevalence survey of healthcare-associated infections and antimicrobial use in European acute care hospitals” protocol adopts the following definition of Central Nervous System Infection (CNS).
CNS-IC: intracranial infection (brain abscess, subdural or epidural infection, encephalitis).
- Intracranial infection must meet at least one of the following criteria
-
- patient has organisms cultured from brain tissue or dura;
- patient has an abscess or evidence of intracranial infection seen during a surgical operation or histopathologic examination;
- patient has at least two of the following signs or symptoms with no other recognised cause: headache,
- dizziness, fever (> 38 °C), localising neurologic signs, changing level of consciousness, or confusion,
- and at least one of the following:
- organisms seen on microscopic examination of brain or abscess tissue obtained by needle aspiration or by biopsy during a surgical operation or autopsy;
- positive antigen test on blood or urine;
- radiographic evidence of infection, e.g. abnormal findings on ultrasound, CT scan, MRI, radionuclide brain scan, or arteriogram;
- diagnostic single antibody titre (IgM) or fourfold increase in paired sera (IgG) for pathogen
- and
- if the diagnosis is made antemortem, the physician institutes appropriate antimicrobial therapy.
- if meningitis and a brain abscess are present together, the infection must be reported as CNS-IC.
CNS-MEN: meningitis or ventriculitis.
- Meningitis or ventriculitis must meet at least one of the following criteria
-
- patient has organisms cultured from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF);
- patient has at least one of the following signs or symptoms with no other recognised cause:
- fever (> 38 °C), headache, stiff neck, meningeal signs, cranial nerve signs, or irritability,
- and at least one of the following:
- increased white cells, elevated protein, and/or decreased glucose in CSF;
- organisms seen on Gram’s stain of CSF;
- organisms cultured from blood;
- positive antigen test of CSF, blood, or urine;
- diagnostic single antibody titre (IgM) or fourfold increase in paired sera (IgG) for pathogen
- and
- if the diagnosis is made antemortem, the physician institutes appropriate antimicrobial therapy.
Further instructions for reporting:
- CSF shunt infection must be reported as SSI-O if it occurs <=1 year of placement; if later or after manipulation/access of the shunt, report as CNS-MEN;
- meningoencephalitis must be reported as CNS-MEN;
- spinal abscess with meningitis must be reported as CNS-MEN.
CNS-SA: spinal abscess without meningitis.
- An abscess of the spinal epidural or subdural space, without the involvement of the cerebrospinal fluid or adjacent bone structures, must meet at least one of the following criteria
-
- patient has organisms cultured from an abscess in the spinal epidural or subdural space;
- patient has an abscess in the spinal epidural or subdural space seen during a surgical operation or at autopsy or evidence of an abscess seen during a histopathologic examination;
- patient has at least one of the following signs or symptoms with no other recognised cause: fever (> 38 °C), back pain, focal tenderness, radiculitis, paraparesis, or paraplegia,
- and at least one of the following:
- organisms cultured from blood;
- radiographic evidence of a spinal abscess, e.g. abnormal findings on myelography, ultrasound, CT scan, MRI, or other scans (gallium, technetium, etc.);
- and
- if the diagnosis is made antemortem, the physician institutes appropriate antimicrobial therapy.
- Spinal abscess with meningitis must be reported as meningitis.
Link to European IC/HH Core Competencies
- Area 3. Surveillance and investigation of healthcare-associated infection (HAI)
References
Root > Infection control and hospital hygiene > Surveillance and investigation of healthcare-associated infections > Case definitions of healthcare infections > HAI case definitions for use in hospitals