Epidural abscess (intracranial)
Revision as of 18:11, 9 February 2015 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs) (→Differential Diagnosis)
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
Differential Diagnosis
Intracranial Mass
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Intra-axial
- Hemorrhagic stroke (Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage)
- Traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage
- Extra-axial
- Epidural hemorrhage
- Subdural hemorrhage
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage (aneurysmal intracranial hemorrhage)
- Intra-axial
- Brain tumor
- Brain abscess
- Subdural empyema
- Epidural abscess (intracranial)
Treatment
- Surgical decompresion
- Antibiotics
- Vanco + metronidazole + (cefotaxime or ceftriaxone or ceftazidime)
- Ceftazidime 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, Haemophilus influenzae, and aerobes
- Vanco + metronidazole + (cefotaxime or ceftriaxone or ceftazidime)
See Also
Sources
Uptodate
