Department of General Medicine, Royal Children’s Hospital, Flemington Road, Parkville, VIC 3052, Australia.
Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2013 Feb;32(2):129-35. doi: 10.1097/INF.0b013e3182748d6e.
There are no guidelines for the management of brain abscesses in children, and there is a paucity of recent data describing clinical and microbiologic features. We aimed to identify factors affecting outcome to inform antibiotic recommendations.
From 1999 to 2009, 118 children presented with brain abscesses to 4 neurosurgical centers in the United Kingdom. Clinical, microbiologic and treatment data were collected.
The commonest preceding infection was sinusitis, with 59% of all children receiving antibiotics before diagnosis. Nonspecific symptoms were common, with only 13% having the triad of fever, headache and focal neurological deficit. Time between symptom onset and diagnosis varied widely (median, 10 days; range, 0-44). Magnetic resonance imaging was more frequently diagnostic than computed tomography. The most frequent organisms were Streptococcus milleri (38%), except after penetrating head injury or neurosurgery, for which Staphylococcus aureus was most common. The commonest empiric antibiotics were ceftriaxone/cefotaxime and metronidazole, which offered effective antimicrobial therapy in up to 83% of cases. Metronidazole added benefit in a maximum of 7% of cases, with ceftriaxone/cefotaxime alone sufficient in at least 76% and in all cases with cyanotic congenital heart disease or meningitis. A carbapenem would have been effective in 90%. The case fatality rate was 6% (33% in the immunocompromised). Long-term neurological sequelae affected 35%. Age younger than 5 years and a Glasgow Coma Scale score ≤8 were associated with poor outcome at 6 months.
We recommend ceftriaxone/cefotaxime and metronidazole as empiric treatment, although metronidazole may be unnecessary in many cases, with antistaphylococcal cover in cases of head trauma. Meropenem potentially would be a better choice in the immunocompromised. A prospective study of intravenous and oral treatment guided by clinical improvement is required beause 1-2 weeks of intravenous antibiotics during a total of 6 weeks may be sufficient in children.
目前尚无儿童脑脓肿管理指南,近期鲜有数据描述其临床和微生物学特征。本研究旨在确定影响转归的因素,为抗生素推荐提供依据。
1999 年至 2009 年,英国 4 家神经外科中心共收治 118 例脑脓肿患儿。收集临床、微生物学和治疗数据。
最常见的前驱感染是鼻窦炎,所有患儿中有 59%在诊断前接受了抗生素治疗。非特异性症状很常见,仅有 13%存在发热、头痛和局灶性神经功能缺损三联征。症状出现至诊断的时间差异很大(中位数 10 天,范围 0-44 天)。磁共振成像(MRI)比计算机断层扫描(CT)更具诊断价值。最常见的病原体是米勒链球菌(38%),但穿透性颅脑损伤或神经外科手术后,最常见的病原体是金黄色葡萄球菌。最常用的经验性抗生素是头孢曲松/头孢噻肟和甲硝唑,在多达 83%的病例中提供了有效的抗菌治疗。甲硝唑最多可增加 7%的疗效,头孢曲松/头孢噻肟单独应用至少可达到 76%,并且在所有伴有发绀型先天性心脏病或脑膜炎的病例中都有效。碳青霉烯类药物的疗效可达 90%。病死率为 6%(免疫功能低下者为 33%)。6 个月时,预后不良的相关因素包括年龄<5 岁和格拉斯哥昏迷评分(GCS)≤8。
我们建议头孢曲松/头孢噻肟和甲硝唑作为经验性治疗药物,尽管许多情况下甲硝唑可能不必要,而对于颅脑外伤患者则需要加用抗葡萄球菌药物。对于免疫功能低下者,美罗培南可能是更好的选择。需要开展静脉和口服抗生素治疗的前瞻性研究,因为在 6 周的总疗程中,1-2 周的静脉抗生素治疗可能对儿童足够。