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Review
. 2016;16(2):205-21.
doi: 10.1586/14737175.2015.1134321. Epub 2016 Jan 19.

Clinical management of infectious cerebral vasculitides

Affiliations
Review

Clinical management of infectious cerebral vasculitides

Francisco Javier Carod Artal. Expert Rev Neurother. 2016.

Abstract

A wide range of infections (virus, bacteria, parasite and fungi) may cause cerebral vasculitides. Headache, seizures, encephalopathy and stroke are common forms of presentation. Infection and inflammation of intracranial vessels may cause pathological vascular remodelling, vascular occlusion and ischemia. Vasculitis in chronic meningitis may cause ischemic infarctions, and is associated with poor outcome. Appropriate neuroimaging (CT-angiography, MR-angiography, conventional 4-vessel angiography) and laboratory testing (specific antibodies in blood and CSF, CSF culture and microscopy) and even brain biopsy are needed to quickly establish the aetiology. Enhancement of contrast, wall thickening and lumen narrowing are radiological signs pointing to an infectious vasculitis origin. Although corticosteroids and prophylactic antiplatelet therapy have been used in infectious cerebral vasculitis, there are no randomized clinical trials that have evaluated their efficacy and safety. Stable mycotic aneurysms can be treated with specific antimicrobial therapy. Endovascular therapy and intracranial surgery are reserved for ruptured aneurysms or enlarging unruptured aneurysms.

Keywords: Cerebral vasculitis; Lyme disease; VZV vasculopathy; infectious disease; infectious vasculitides; mycotic aneurysm; stroke; syphilis.

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