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WNV

Learning Points:

General approach

  • Obtaining a thorough history is key in assessing altered mental status
  • When examining patients with fevers, headaches and altered mental status, make sure to conduct a Jolt accentuation test in addition to Kernig’s and Brudzinski’s  to increase sensitivity of detecting meningitis
  • Obtain blood cultures prior to starting empiric antibiotics
  • Make sure to obtain CT head/ MRI brain prior to lumbar puncture if concerned for encephalitis
  • Please note, lumbar puncture can be performed after initiation of antibiotics

WNV encephalitis

  • Clinical presentation: variable however patients can be asymptomatic 60-80% of the time or present with fatigue, memory impairment, weakness, headache and neurological deficits
  • CSF findings: elevated protein (<150 mg/dL) and moderate pleocytosis (<500 cells/microL) with predominance of lymphocytes, however in early infection, neutrophils may predominate; positive WNV IgM in serum or CSF, seroconversion usually occurs between 4-10 days after viremia detected
  • Treatment: primarily supportive care

Click here: http://www.publichealth.lacounty.gov/acd/VectorWestNile.htm for an updated incident report on WNV in California

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