Epidural abscess (intracranial)

Background

  • Much less common than spinal epidural abscess (1:9)
  • Usually caused by local spread of infection or local inoculation during surgery or trauma
  • Usually isolated to calvarium due to adherence of dura to foramen magnum

Clinical Features

  • Symptoms of intracranial mass
    • papilledema
    • focal neurologic symptoms
    • Headache
    • Vomiting/nausea

Diagnosis

  • Suspect diagnosis based on clinical history and physical exam
  • Imaging modality of choice is MRI
  • CT w/ IV contrast is reasonable alternative

DDX

  • Any intracranial mass
    • ICH
    • Tumor
    • Brain abscess
    • Subdural empyema

Treatment

  • Surgical decompresion
  • Antibiotics
    • Vanco + metronidazole + either cefotaxime or ceftriaxone or ceftazadine
      • Ceftazidine is preferred if pseudomonas is considered likely
      • Can substitute nafcillin or oxacillin for vanco if not MRSA
    • Treat for 6-8 weeks
    • If likely nasopharyngeal source (sinusitis, mastoiditis), may consider regiment covering strep, hemophilus, and aerobes

See Also

Epidural Abscess (Spinal)

Sources

Uptodate