Bulging fontanelle: Difference between revisions
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**The anterior fontanelle usually closes between 7-19 months of age | **The anterior fontanelle usually closes between 7-19 months of age | ||
*A bulging fontanelle represents [[Management of Elevated Intracranial Pressure|increased intracranial pressure]], which may be transient and either benign or malignant | *A bulging fontanelle represents [[Management of Elevated Intracranial Pressure|increased intracranial pressure]], which may be transient and either benign or malignant | ||
*Key EM concern: | *Key EM concern: [[meningitis (peds)|meningitis]] is the most critical diagnosis to rule out in a febrile infant with a bulging fontanelle | ||
*Meticulous history and physical is essential to guide management | *Meticulous history and physical is essential to guide management | ||
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===Infectious (Most Urgent)=== | ===Infectious (Most Urgent)=== | ||
*'''[[Meningitis (Peds)|Meningitis]]''' — must rule out in febrile infant | *'''[[Meningitis (Peds)|Meningitis]]''' — must rule out in febrile infant | ||
* | *[[Encephalitis]] / meningoencephalitis | ||
* | *[[Brain abscess]] | ||
===Increased ICP=== | ===Increased ICP=== | ||
* | *[[Hydrocephalus]] (congenital or acquired) | ||
* | *[[Intracranial Hemorrhage (Main)|Intracranial hemorrhage]] (traumatic or non-accidental trauma) | ||
* | *[[Intracranial mass|Space-occupying lesions]] (tumor) | ||
* | *Dural sinus thrombosis | ||
* | *[[Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension|Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri)]] | ||
===Metabolic/Endocrine=== | ===Metabolic/Endocrine=== | ||
* | *[[Diabetic ketoacidosis]] | ||
* | *[[Inborn errors of metabolism]] | ||
*Thyroid disorders (hypothyroidism) | *Thyroid disorders (hypothyroidism) | ||
*Parathyroid disorders (hypoparathyroidism) | *Parathyroid disorders (hypoparathyroidism) | ||
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===Other=== | ===Other=== | ||
* | *[[Leukemia (Peds)|Leukemia]] (bone marrow infiltration) | ||
* | *[[Anemia]] (severe) | ||
* | *[[Lead toxicity|Lead encephalopathy]] | ||
* | *[[Congestive Heart Failure]] (with cerebral venous congestion) | ||
*[[Roseola infantum]] (benign, self-limited — may cause transient bulging fontanelle) | *[[Roseola infantum]] (benign, self-limited — may cause transient bulging fontanelle) | ||
*Post-[[Vaccination Schedule|vaccination]] (benign, self-limited — rare) | *Post-[[Vaccination Schedule|vaccination]] (benign, self-limited — rare) | ||
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===Standard Approach=== | ===Standard Approach=== | ||
* | *[[Head CT]] (non-contrast): evaluate for hemorrhage, hydrocephalus, mass, edema | ||
**Obtain before LP if concern for mass lesion or elevated ICP | **Obtain before LP if concern for mass lesion or elevated ICP | ||
*'''[[LP]]''' (lumbar puncture): if not contraindicated by CT findings | *'''[[LP]]''' (lumbar puncture): if not contraindicated by CT findings | ||
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**Send viral studies if encephalitis suspected | **Send viral studies if encephalitis suspected | ||
**Consider HSV PCR in neonates | **Consider HSV PCR in neonates | ||
* | *[[CBC]], [[BMP]], blood cultures | ||
*Blood glucose | *Blood glucose | ||
*Consider metabolic workup if no infectious or structural cause identified | *Consider metabolic workup if no infectious or structural cause identified | ||
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==Management== | ==Management== | ||
*Treat underlying pathology | *Treat underlying pathology | ||
* | *Suspected meningitis: empiric antibiotics should NOT be delayed for imaging or LP | ||
**<1 month: [[ampicillin]] + [[cefotaxime]] (or [[ceftriaxone]] if >28 days) +/- acyclovir | **<1 month: [[ampicillin]] + [[cefotaxime]] (or [[ceftriaxone]] if >28 days) +/- acyclovir | ||
**1-3 months: [[vancomycin]] + [[ceftriaxone]] (or cefotaxime) | **1-3 months: [[vancomycin]] + [[ceftriaxone]] (or cefotaxime) | ||
**>3 months: [[vancomycin]] + [[ceftriaxone]] | **>3 months: [[vancomycin]] + [[ceftriaxone]] | ||
* | *Elevated ICP: see [[Management of Elevated Intracranial Pressure]] | ||
**Head of bed elevation 30 degrees | **Head of bed elevation 30 degrees | ||
**Neurosurgical consultation for hydrocephalus or mass | **Neurosurgical consultation for hydrocephalus or mass | ||
* | *Herpes encephalitis: IV [[acyclovir]] — start empirically in neonates with any suspicion | ||
* | *Intracranial hemorrhage: neurosurgical consultation, correct coagulopathy | ||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
Revision as of 09:26, 22 March 2026
Background
- Fontanelles are fibrous, membrane-covered gaps between cranial bones
- A newborn has six fontanelles: anterior, posterior, two mastoid, and two sphenoid
- Anterior and posterior are the most prominent
- The posterior fontanelle usually closes by 1-2 months of age
- The anterior fontanelle usually closes between 7-19 months of age
- A bulging fontanelle represents increased intracranial pressure, which may be transient and either benign or malignant
- Key EM concern: meningitis is the most critical diagnosis to rule out in a febrile infant with a bulging fontanelle
- Meticulous history and physical is essential to guide management
Clinical Features
Normal Fontanelle
- Soft, flat, or slightly concave when infant is upright and calm
- May briefly bulge with crying, coughing, or Valsalva maneuver — this is normal and transient
- Sunken fontanelle suggests dehydration
Abnormal (Bulging) Fontanelle
- Tense, convex, non-pulsatile fontanelle when infant is calm and upright
- May feel firm or "full" to palpation
- Assess with infant calm and in upright position (crying and supine position can cause false bulging)
Associated Findings
- Fever + bulging fontanelle → meningitis until proven otherwise
- Irritability, high-pitched cry, poor feeding, vomiting
- Lethargy, altered mental status, seizures (late signs)
- "Sunset" eyes (downward gaze deviation — hydrocephalus)
- Split sutures, rapidly increasing head circumference (increased ICP, hydrocephalus)
- Bruising, retinal hemorrhages → consider NAT
- Papilledema (though difficult to assess in infants)
Red Flags
- Fever + bulging fontanelle (meningitis — requires LP)
- Altered mental status or seizures
- Rapidly enlarging head circumference
- Signs of non-accidental trauma (bruises, retinal hemorrhages)
- Focal neurologic deficits
- Apnea or bradycardia
Differential Diagnosis
Infectious (Most Urgent)
- Meningitis — must rule out in febrile infant
- Encephalitis / meningoencephalitis
- Brain abscess
Increased ICP
- Hydrocephalus (congenital or acquired)
- Intracranial hemorrhage (traumatic or non-accidental trauma)
- Space-occupying lesions (tumor)
- Dural sinus thrombosis
- Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri)
Metabolic/Endocrine
- Diabetic ketoacidosis
- Inborn errors of metabolism
- Thyroid disorders (hypothyroidism)
- Parathyroid disorders (hypoparathyroidism)
- Hypervitaminosis A
- Uremia
Other
- Leukemia (bone marrow infiltration)
- Anemia (severe)
- Lead encephalopathy
- Congestive Heart Failure (with cerebral venous congestion)
- Roseola infantum (benign, self-limited — may cause transient bulging fontanelle)
- Post-vaccination (benign, self-limited — rare)
- Shigella (meningismus without meningitis)
- Viral syndromes
Benign/Transient
- Crying, Valsalva, supine positioning (normal variant — resolves when calm and upright)
Evaluation
Assessment
- Examine fontanelle with infant calm and upright
- Head circumference and comparison to prior measurements
- Full neurologic exam (tone, reflexes, mental status)
- Fundoscopic exam if possible (retinal hemorrhages → NAT)
- Assess vital signs including temperature
Standard Approach
- Head CT (non-contrast): evaluate for hemorrhage, hydrocephalus, mass, edema
- Obtain before LP if concern for mass lesion or elevated ICP
- LP (lumbar puncture): if not contraindicated by CT findings
- Opening pressure, CSF cell count, glucose, protein, Gram stain, culture
- Send viral studies if encephalitis suspected
- Consider HSV PCR in neonates
- CBC, BMP, blood cultures
- Blood glucose
- Consider metabolic workup if no infectious or structural cause identified
When to Obtain Imaging Before LP
- Focal neurologic deficits
- Papilledema
- Signs of severely elevated ICP (altered mental status, bradycardia, hypertension)
- History of shunt (shunt malfunction)
- History of CNS disease or mass
Management
- Treat underlying pathology
- Suspected meningitis: empiric antibiotics should NOT be delayed for imaging or LP
- <1 month: ampicillin + cefotaxime (or ceftriaxone if >28 days) +/- acyclovir
- 1-3 months: vancomycin + ceftriaxone (or cefotaxime)
- >3 months: vancomycin + ceftriaxone
- Elevated ICP: see Management of Elevated Intracranial Pressure
- Head of bed elevation 30 degrees
- Neurosurgical consultation for hydrocephalus or mass
- Herpes encephalitis: IV acyclovir — start empirically in neonates with any suspicion
- Intracranial hemorrhage: neurosurgical consultation, correct coagulopathy
Disposition
Admit
- All infants with bulging fontanelle + fever (pending LP results and cultures)
- Suspected meningitis or encephalitis
- Intracranial hemorrhage or mass
- New hydrocephalus
- Non-accidental trauma (also alert child protective services)
- Altered mental status or seizures
Discharge
- Discharge is rare — only if clearly benign and transient cause identified (e.g., post-vaccination in well-appearing infant with normal exam)
- Must have reliable caregivers and immediate return access
- Return precautions: fever, poor feeding, irritability, vomiting, seizure, lethargy
See Also
- Meningitis (peds)
- Management of Elevated Intracranial Pressure
- Hydrocephalus
- Non-accidental trauma
- Infant fever
