Brain abscesses may result from a number of causes including, extension of sepsis from middle ear or sinuses, trauma or surgery to the scalp, penetrating head injuries and embolic events from endocarditis
PC
The presenting symptoms will depend upon the site of the abscess (those in critical areas e.g. motor cortex) will present earlier. Abscesses have a considerable mass effect in the brain and raised intracranial pressure is common.
- headache
- fever
- may be absent and usually not the swinging pyrexia seen with abscesses at other sites
- focal neurology
- e.g. oculomotor nerve palsy or abducens nerve palsy secondary to raised intracranial pressure
- other features consistent with raised intracranial pressure
- nausea
- papilloedema
- seizures
Investigations
- Assessment of the patient includes imaging with CT scanning
Management
- surgery
- a craniotomy is performed and the abscess cavity debrided
- the abscess may reform because the head is closed following abscess drainage.
- IV antibiotics: IV 3rd-generation cephalosporin + metronidazole
- intracranial pressure management: e.g. dexamethasone