Aseptic Meningitis (Viral Meningitis) definition, diagnosis and treatment in 2025

Lecture on Aseptic Meningitis (Viral Meningitis) lecture 2025

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Depicting brain  Aseptic Meningitis (Viral Meningitis)
 Aseptic Meningitis (Viral Meningitis)

Definition of aseptic meningitis:

Aseptic meningitis is a clinical term for an illness comprising meningeal
irritation, fever, and alterations in consciousness of relatively acute
onset. 
  • The clinical course is less fulminant than in pyogenic
    meningitis.  
  • In contrast to pyogenic meningitis, examination of the CSF often shows
    lymphocytosis, moderate protein elevation, and a normal glucose
    level. 
  • The disease typically is self-limiting
bacterial vs viral vs tubercualr meningitis

Causes and causative agents of viral meningitis

Viruses: 

  • Arboviral (mosquito-borne) diseases
  • Influenza 
  • LaCrosse Encephalitis virus
  • West Nile Virus
Common; Usually clears up in 1-2 weeks with no specific treatment

Rarely
serious infection of fluid in the spinal cord or fluid that surrounds
the brain
Also called aseptic meningitis

Signs and symptoms of aseptic meningitis:

  • Usually occur one week after exposure
  • Fever
  • Headache
  • Stiff neck
  • Tiredness
  • Sore Throat
  • Vomiting
  • Photophobia

Treatment and prevention of aseptic meningitis:

  • No specific treatment for viral meningitis
  • Antibiotics do not work on viruses.
  • Pay careful attention to personal hygiene.
  • Good hand-washing helps prevent spread of infection and viruses.

Danger Signs of Meningitis

The danger signs of meningitis (in both children and adults) include:

General Danger Signs:

  1. High fever (often sudden onset)
  2. Severe headache
  3. Neck stiffness (difficulty bending the neck forward)
  4. Photophobia (sensitivity to light)
  5. Altered mental status (confusion, drowsiness, difficulty waking up)
  6. Seizures
  7. Nausea and vomiting
  8. Cold hands and feet, limb pain, pale or mottled skin (signs of septicemia)

In Infants & Young Children:

  1. Bulging fontanelle (soft spot on the head)
  2. Poor feeding or refusing to eat
  3. High-pitched or weak cry
  4. Lethargy or extreme irritability
  5. Floppy body or stiffness

Signs of Meningococcal Septicemia (Emergency):

  1. Petechial or purpuric rash (non-blanching, red/purple spots)
  2. Rapid breathing or respiratory distress
  3. Shock (low blood pressure, weak pulse, altered consciousness)

⚠️ Seek immediate medical attention if any of these signs are present! Meningitis can rapidly progress to life-threatening complications.

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