Meningitis and Encephalitis: What's the Difference?
"Meningitis" and "encephalitis" are two words that pop onto most
people's radar screens from time to time, and usually in some
scary context, like hearing of a cluster of cases in their
child's school, or reading media reports of epidemics occurring
nationally or internationally. While most people understand that
these words mean there is some sort of infection of the nervous
system, other distinctions and implications are often left
unstated and, as a result, can be vague or confusing.
The basic concepts are built into the words themselves. Starting
at the ends of the words and working forwards, "-itis" is the
medical suffix meaning inflammation. Although it's possible for
inflammation to occur without an infection being present, as a
practical matter, in most cases of meningitis or encephalitis
the inflammation is indeed due to an infection.
The next step in understanding these concepts is to analyze the
first parts of the words. "Mening-" refers to the meninges which
are the membranous coverings of the brain and spinal cord. So
"meningitis" means inflammation or infection of these membranous
coverings. By contrast, "encephal-" refers to the encephalon or
brain (originating from the Greek word "enkephalos"), so
"encephalitis" means inflammation or infection of the brain
itself.
Although no case of meningitis or encephalitis is trivial,
depending on the particulars, some cases end up as temporary
illnesses from which there is full recovery, while others can be
severely damaging or even lethal. In a nutshell, cases of
meningitis caused by viruses are usually associated with good
outcomes (even without treatment), while cases of meningitis
involving bacteria are very serious and require emergency
treatment with powerful antibiotics. All cases of
encephalitis--usually caused by viruses and not by bacteria--are
serious, and antiviral treatment is available for some of the
viruses involved, but not all.
Most cases of either meningitis or encephalitis start fairly
abruptly, sometimes following an obvious infection elsewhere in
the body and sometimes not. As with most infections, a fever is
usually present in meningitis or encephalitis, but is not
necessarily striking. In both cases the patient feels miserable
in general and often complains of pain in the head, neck, or
both.
Because encephalitis involves infection of the brain itself,
symptoms of altered brain function--like confusion or decreased
alertness--are usually present, while in cases of meningitis the
patient is initially alert and, though understandably distracted
by pain and misery, still in command of their mental processes.
In either case, prompt medical assessment is important. In both
meningitis and encephalitis a lumbar puncture (also known as a
spinal tap) is usually crucial in detecting the presence of an
infection, identifying the infecting organism, and guiding
successful treatment. While an imaging test like a CT scan or an
MRI scan is often included as part of the evaluation, they do
not replace the lumbar puncture in identifying the essential
features of the infection.
A lumbar puncture is usually performed with the patient lying on
one side, curled into a fetal position. The doctor preps and
drapes the patient's lower back to create a sterile field in
which to work. After numbing the skin of the lower back the
doctor inserts a needle in the middle of the spine, puncturing
the meninges. In the lower back there is no spinal cord, so
there is no risk of puncturing it, too. Watery fluid is
collected into tubes as it drips out of the back of the needle.
Then the needle is withdrawn.
This watery fluid is called CSF--short for cerebrospinal
fluid--and because it resides within the meninges (and outside
of the brain and spinal cord) it holds some of the keys to
diagnosing the infection. Laboratory personnel can perform
several tests on the fluid right away, like measuring the
concentrations of red and white blood cells, as well as the
concentrations of protein and sugar. An increase in
concentration of white blood ("pus") cells and an increase in
protein concentration are expected findings when the meninges
are infected by either bacteria or viruses, with the changes
more pronounced in bacterial infections than in viral
infections. Reductions in sugar concentration are common in
bacterial but not viral infections. Other tests on the CSF
involve inherent delays, like trying to grow bacteria from the
CSF in Petri dishes or other culture media.
In truth, cases of encephalitis also usually involve
inflammation of the meninges, so a stickler for linguistic
accuracy could rightly maintain that they should be called
"meningo-encephalitis" to reflect the involvements of both
meninges and brain. But in common usage, the "meningo-" prefix
is often dropped. So because CSF changes occur in cases of both
meningitis and encephalitis, the main clinical feature that
separates the two is the patient's mental state, with confusion
or decreased level of consciousness making a strong case for
encephalitis.
Once the CSF has been collected, the doctor can begin treatment
without risk of obscuring the fluid's diagnostic features. So
long as there is any likelihood of bacterial infection, the
doctor administers one or more antibiotic drugs, usually via an
intravenous catheter. If the clinical findings could also be
interpreted as due to a treatable virus, the doctor concurrently
administers an antiviral drug. With the seriousness of these
illnesses, the benefits of over-treatment exceed its risks, and
once the dust settles and the diagnosis is clarified, needless
treatment can be discontinued without harm.
(C) 2005 by Gary Cordingley