Clark W C, Metcalf J C, Muhlbauer M S, Dohan F C, Robertson J H
Neurosurgery. 1986 May;18(5):604-10. doi: 10.1227/00006123-198605000-00015.
Twelve recent cases of Mycobacterium tuberculosis meningitis were presented, and the literature was reviewed. There are no particularly new or unique therapies or approaches to the management of this most serious disease. The major obstacle to successful diagnosis and treatment of tuberculous meningitis continues to be a lack of clinical suspicion of its presence. As illustrated in the cases presented, it has been our experience that patients already moribund or nonresponsive do not respond, regardless of the intervention undertaken. The most sensitive and economical method of detecting M. tuberculosis in the CSF may be LPA. However, this has not yet been widely validated or accepted. Larger volumes of CSF should be sent to the laboratory for testing and centifuged to about 5x concentrations before both acid-fast bacilli staining and culture are attempted. If tuberculous meningitis is suspected, three-drug therapy can be started immediately without jeopardizing subsequent culture confirmation of the presence of the TB bacillus. In addition, these patients must be followed closely to detect hydrocephalus at the earliest possible moment. When patients fail to respond to appropriate antituberculosis and pressure-reducing therapy, hydrocephalus should be actively sought by either CT or radioisotope cisternography. Although the decision to proceed to ventricular drainage or shunting must be individually made in adult patients with infection-related hydrocephalus, we agree with others that surgical intervention should be considered early and should be performed if the level of consciousness deteriorates, intracranial pressure increases, or ventricular enlargement or enhancing basal exudates are identified on CT.