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A twelve-year review of central nervous system bacterial abscesses; presentation and aetiology.

OBJECTIVES: To review and document the changing patterns in diagnosis, causes and treatment of bacterial infections of the central nervous system (CNS) in a national neurosurgical unit only in patients from whom a specimen was obtained for culture.

METHODS: The case notes, radiological results and laboratory records of all 163 patients in our institution who underwent a neurosurgical procedure between 1988 and 2000 for a CNS abscess in a national center were reviewed retrospectively. Those patients from whom there were no operative specimens (i.e. neurosurgical intervention was not performed) and who were treated empirically were excluded, as were patients with mycobacterial infection.

RESULTS: The mean age of the 163 patients was 35.2 years. Headache, pyrexia and an altered mental state were the commonest presentations. The frontal lobe was the commonest anatomical site (62 patients, 38%) and the majority of abscesses occurred following community infections such as sinusitis and mastoiditis; no primary source could be identified in 32 (20%) patients. Bacteria were isolated from 73% of patients and polymicrobial infections occurred in 29 (17.7%) patients. Anaerobes accounted for only 13.6% of isolates and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) was isolated on five occasions, all in the last five years of this review. Sixteen (9.8%) patients died prior to discharge or transfer back to the original referring hospital and 18 (11%) patients developed epilepsy.

CONCLUSION: There was a relatively high incidence of polymicrobial infection but the number of specimens with anaerobes was small, which may be because of the use of empiric metronidazole before surgical intervention. Most infections were community-acquired and responded well to a combination of surgical drainage and antibiotic therapy. The emergence of MRSA in this group of patients is, however, worrying.

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