Introduction
It is important to realize that a brain abscess can form in the brain when bacteria or fungi come from elsewhere in the body and travel through the bloodstream or through veins from facial areas into the brain.
Certainly, this is particularly dangerous in patients whose immune system is already weakened such as in AIDS patients or drug addicts who use intravenous narcotics, as dirty needles can be the cause of a brain abscess.
However, a chronic sinus infection or ear infection that involves the cranial bone can also cause a brain abscess. It must be remembered that other illnesses such as infected lungs (bronchiectases, bad pneumonia) or heart valve disease (with endocarditis) can also be an underlying cause.
Brain abscess symptom
One of the first symptoms may be a headache, nausea and vomiting. The patient may experience a personality change, be drowsy or get a sudden seizure.
At the same time there are fevers and chills and the blood test shows signs of an infection. Such a patient requires an assessment at the Emergency Room of a hospital where the physician likely will order several tests. Indeed, the physician usually does a lumbar puncture in this setting to obtain a sample of cerebrospinal fluid for culturing of the causative organism. Frequently, other tests such as an emergency CT scan or MRI scan can be very helpful.
Treatment
Truly, intravenous antibiotics are usually started right away after the lumbar puncture and some blood cultures have been taken. Markedly, the abscess may be walled off and the antibiotic may not penetrate into the center of it. But a neurosurgeon can either drain the abscess with a needle through a Burr hole or perform open surgery (a craniotomy). Certainly, mortality is often high depending on the other underlying factors mentioned above (Ref. 3, 1440). Here is a website with multiple MRI scan images of a brain abscess. In the left side of the brain there is a roundish lesion from a brain abscess.
References
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