Brain Abscess
Definition
A brain abscess is a focal, intracerebral infection that begins as a localized area of cerebritis (inflammation of brain parenchyma) and evolves into a collection of pus surrounded by a vascularized capsule.
Pathophysiology
Stages of evolution (histopathologic):
|
Stage |
Time (approx) |
Pathology |
Key Feature |
|
1. Early cerebritis |
1–3 days |
Localized inflammation, neutrophilic infiltration |
No capsule |
|
2. Late cerebritis |
4–9 days |
Central necrosis, macrophage infiltration |
Beginning of capsule formation |
|
3. Early capsule |
10–13 days |
Fibroblast proliferation, collagen capsule forms |
Thin capsule, edema persists |
|
4. Late capsule |
≥14 days |
Mature collagen capsule, surrounding gliosis |
Organized abscess |
Mechanism:
- Local infection → cerebritis → necrosis → liquefaction → pus formation → capsule formation.
Etiology
1. Source of Infection
|
Route |
Mechanism |
Common organisms |
|
Contiguous spread (45–50%) |
From otitis media, mastoiditis, sinusitis, dental infection |
Streptococcus milleri group, anaerobes, Bacteroides |
|
Hematogenous spread(25%) |
From lung abscess, endocarditis, cyanotic CHD |
Streptococcus, Staphylococcus aureus |
|
Direct inoculation |
Trauma, neurosurgery |
S. aureus, Gram-negative bacilli |
|
Cryptogenic |
No source found (15–20%) |
Mixed flora |
Common Causative Organisms
|
Setting / Predisposition |
Common Organisms |
|
Otitis / Mastoiditis / Sinusitis |
Streptococcus milleri, anaerobes (Bacteroides, Peptostreptococcus) |
|
Dental infection |
Fusobacterium, Prevotella, Streptococcus |
|
Post-traumatic / Post-surgical |
S. aureus, Gram-negative bacilli (Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas) |
|
Cyanotic congenital heart disease |
S. viridans, S. intermedius |
|
Immunocompromised (esp. HIV) |
Nocardia, Toxoplasma gondii, Aspergillus, Candida |
|
Neutropenia / Transplant |
Fungi (Aspergillus, Mucor), Nocardia |
Location Correlation
|
Source |
Typical Location |
|
Otitis media / Mastoiditis |
Temporal lobe, cerebellum |
|
Sinusitis |
Frontal lobe |
|
Dental infection |
Frontal lobe |
|
Hematogenous spread |
Multiple abscesses at gray-white junction |
Clinical Features
1. General Symptoms
- Headache (most common)
- Fever (only 50% of cases)
- Nausea, vomiting
- Lethargy or altered sensorium
- Raised ICP symptoms (papilledema)
2. Focal Neurologic Deficits
- Hemiparesis, aphasia, visual field defects depending on site
3. Seizures
- Present in ~25–35% (often focal)
4. Signs of Infection
- Fever, leukocytosis (may be absent in immunocompromised)
Complications
- Rupture into ventricle → ventriculitis → rapid deterioration, high mortality.
- Rupture into subarachnoid space → meningitis.
- Increased ICP, herniation.
- Seizure disorder (late sequela).
Diagnosis
1. Neuroimaging
MRI (Preferred)
- High sensitivity for early cerebritis.
- Ring-enhancing lesion with surrounding vasogenic edema.
- Central restricted diffusion on DWI (helps differentiate from tumor or necrosis).
CT Brain (with contrast)
- Shows ring-enhancing lesion with hypodense center.
- Multiple lesions suggest hematogenous spread.
Differential diagnosis on imaging:
|
Condition |
DWI finding |
Capsule |
Typical context |
|
Brain abscess |
Restricted diffusion (bright core) |
Smooth, thin |
Infective |
|
Metastasis |
No restricted diffusion |
Irregular |
Cancer |
|
Glioblastoma |
Heterogeneous |
Irregular |
Older patient |
|
Toxoplasma (HIV) |
Multiple lesions |
Variable |
AIDS, CD4<100 |
2. Laboratory Studies
- Blood cultures (positive in ~10–30%)
- ESR/CRP elevated
- Avoid LP (risk of herniation due to ↑ICP)
3. Aspiration / Stereotactic biopsy
- For microbiologic diagnosis (gram stain, culture, anaerobic culture, fungal/AFB).
Management
1. Empiric Antibiotic Therapy (IDSA Guidelines)
|
Source / Setting |
Empiric Antibiotic |
|
Otogenic / Sinus / Dental |
Ceftriaxone or Cefotaxime + Metronidazole |
|
Post-traumatic / Neurosurgical |
Vancomycin + Cefepime / Meropenem |
|
Hematogenous (no source) |
Ceftriaxone + Metronidazole ± Vancomycin |
|
Immunocompromised |
Meropenem + Vancomycin ± Voriconazole ± TMP-SMX (for Nocardia) |
Duration:
- 6–8 weeks IV therapy, guided by clinical and radiologic response.
2. Surgical Intervention
Indications:
- Abscess >2.5 cm in diameter
- Mass effect or ↑ICP
- Failure of medical therapy
- Diagnostic uncertainty
- Multiloculated or posterior fossa lesion
Options:
- Stereotactic aspiration (preferred)
- Craniotomy and excision (if superficial, multiloculated, or ruptured)
3. Supportive Management
- ICP control: Elevate head, mannitol, hypertonic saline
- Seizure control: AEDs (levetiracetam or phenytoin)
- Steroids: Only if significant mass effect or edema causing herniation risk; otherwise avoided (may impair capsule formation).
Prognosis
|
Factor |
Outcome |
|
Early diagnosis + appropriate therapy |
~90% recovery |
|
Delay in therapy / rupture |
↑ Mortality (up to 80%) |
|
Immunocompromised / multiple abscesses |
Poor prognosis |
Residual neurologic sequelae (20–30%): seizures, focal deficits.
Special Types
1. Nocardia brain abscess
- Occurs in immunocompromised (esp. transplant, steroid use)
- Multiple abscesses common
- Diagnosis: Modified acid-fast stain
- Treatment: TMP-SMX ± Imipenem
2. Toxoplasma abscess
- Common in HIV (CD4 <100)
- Multiple lesions, basal ganglia/thalamus
- Empiric therapy: Pyrimethamine + Sulfadiazine + Leucovorin
3. Fungal abscess (Aspergillus, Mucor)
- Seen in neutropenia, diabetes, transplant
- Hemorrhagic lesions, angioinvasive
- Treatment: Voriconazole (Aspergillus), Liposomal Amphotericin B (Mucor)
Key Radiologic Differentiation Table
|
Feature |
Brain Abscess |
Tumor (Metastasis/Glioma) |
Toxoplasmosis |
|
DWI |
Restricted (bright core) |
No restriction |
Restricted |
|
Enhancement |
Smooth ring |
Irregular ring |
Thin ring |
|
Center |
Pus (liquid) |
Necrosis |
Pus |
|
Location |
Gray-white junction |
Variable |
Basal ganglia, thalamus |
Complications
- Ventricular rupture (high mortality)
- Subdural empyema
- Hydrocephalus
- Persistent epilepsy
- Residual neurological deficit
Special Situations
A. Brain Abscess in Cyanotic CHD
- Due to right-to-left shunt
- Often parietal lobe
- Streptococcal
B. HIV Patient
Multiple ring lesions → think:
- Toxoplasmosis
- Primary CNS lymphoma
