When should brain imaging precede lumbar puncture in cases of suspected bacterial meningitis?
CHIEF CONCERNS ABOUT LUMBAR PUNCTURE
Lumbar puncture is generally well tolerated. Major complications are rare2 and can be prevented by checking for contraindications and by using appropriate procedural hygiene and technique. Complications include pain at the puncture site, postprocedural headache, epidural hematoma, meningitis, osteomyelitis or discitis, bleeding, epidermoid tumor, and, most worrisome, brain herniation.
Brain herniation
Concern about causing brain herniation is the reason imaging may be ordered before lumbar puncture. Cerebral edema and increased intracranial pressure are common in patients with bacterial meningitis, as well as in other conditions such as bleeding, tumor, and abscess.1 If intracranial pressure is elevated, lumbar puncture can cause cerebral herniation with further neurologic compromise and possibly death. Herniation is believed to be due to a sudden decrease in pressure in the spinal cord caused by removal of cerebrospinal fluid. However, the only information we have about this complication comes from case reports and case series, so we don’t really know how often it happens.
On the other hand, ordering ancillary tests before lumbar puncture and starting empiric antibiotics in patients with suspected bacterial meningitis may delay treatment and lead to worse clinical outcomes and thus should be discouraged.8
Also important to note is the lack of good data regarding the safety of lumbar puncture in patients with potential hemostatic problems (thrombocytopenia, coagulopathy). The recommendation not to do lumbar puncture in these situations (Table 1) is taken from neuraxial anesthesia guidelines.9 Further, a small retrospective study of thrombocytopenic oncology patients requiring lumbar puncture did not demonstrate an increased risk of complications.10
ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
In a retrospective study in 2015, Glimåker et al6 demonstrated that lumbar puncture without prior brain CT was safe in patients with suspected acute bacterial meningitis with moderate to severe impairment of mental status, and that it led to a shorter “door-to-antibiotic time.” Lumbar puncture before imaging was also associated with a concomitant decrease in the risk of death, with no increase in the rate of complications.6
If brain imaging is to be done before lumbar puncture, then blood cultures (and cultures of other fluids, whenever appropriate) should be collected and the patient should be started on empiric management for central nervous system infection first. CT evidence of diffuse cerebral edema, focal lesions with mass effect, and ventriculomegaly should be viewed as further contraindications to lumbar puncture.1
Antibiotic therapy
When contraindications to lumbar puncture exist, the choice of antibiotic and the duration of therapy should be based on the patient’s history, demographics, risk factors, and microbiologic data from blood culture, urine culture, sputum culture, and detection of microbiological antigens.1 The choice of antibiotic is beyond the scope of this article. However, empiric antibiotic therapy with a third-generation cephalosporin (eg, ceftriaxone) and vancomycin and anti-inflammatory therapy (dexamethasone) should in most cases be started immediately after collecting samples for blood culture and must not be delayed by neuroimaging and lumbar puncture with cerebrospinal fluid sampling, given the high rates of mortality and morbidity if treatment is delayed.5,8
Consultation with the neurosurgery service regarding alternative brain ventricular fluid sampling should be considered.11