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Essentials of Diagnosis
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General Considerations
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Presents as an intracranial space-occupying lesion
May occur as a sequela of dental, ear, or sinus infection, a complication of infection elsewhere in the body, or an infection introduced intracranially by trauma or surgical procedures
Most common infective organisms
Streptococci
Staphylococci
Anaerobes
Mixed infections also occur
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Differential Diagnosis
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CT scan of the head characteristically shows an area of contrast enhancement surrounding a low-density core (similar to metastatic neoplasms)
MRI permits earlier recognition of focal cerebritis or abscess
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Diagnostic Procedures
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Intravenous antibiotics, combined with surgical drainage (aspiration or excision) if necessary to reduce the mass effect, or to establish the diagnosis
Broad-spectrum antibiotics are used if the infecting organism is unknown (Table 30–5)
Initial empiric antibiotic regimens typically include
Ceftriaxone (2 g intravenously every 12 hours)
Metronidazole (15 mg/kg intravenous loading dose, followed by 7.5 mg/kg intravenously every 6 hours)
Vancomycin (1 g intravenously every 12 hours)
Antimicrobial treatment is usually continued parenterally for 6–8 weeks and is followed by oral treatment for certain infections, such as nocardiosis, actinomycosis, fungal infections, and tuberculosis
Dexamethasone (4–25 mg orally four times daily, depending on severity, followed by tapering of dose, depending on response) may reduce any associated edema; intravenous mannitol is sometimes required
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