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First-presentation with psychotic behavior to the Emergency Department: Meningitis or not,that is the question
Authors:Abdullah E. Laher  Yousef Etlouba  Muhammed Moolla  Feroza Motara  Nazeema Ariefdien
Affiliation:1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;2. Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract:

Introduction

Meningitis is a potentially life threatening medical emergency. Psychotic behavior may be a presenting feature in patients with meningitis. We aimed to determine the value of various clinical and laboratory features at ruling-out meningitis in the patient presenting with a first-episode of psychotic behavior.

Methods

Medical records of 159 subjects presenting to a tertiary academic hospital over a 6-month period with one or more psychotic features for the first time were prospectively gathered. Pathological cerebrospinal fluid findings as well as clinical and other laboratory findings were tabulated and discussed retrospectively.

Results

Cerebrospinal fluid was obtained in 153/159 (96.2%) subjects. Meningitis was confirmed in twenty-eight (18.3%) subjects. Of these, a) one or more clinical feature of meningitis (headache, neck stiffness, photophobia or focal neuropathy) was present in 21 subjects (75.0%), b) visual hallucinations in 15 subjects (53.6%), c) pyrexia >37.5?°C in 7 subjects (25.0%), d) CRP >10?mg/L in 21 subjects (75.0%), e) HIV seropositive status in 19 subjects (67.9%) and f) an absence of illicit substances on urinalysis in 23 subjects (82.1%). Various combinations of these variables, where the presence of ≥1 variable was regarded as positive, were unable to rule-out meningitis in all study subjects.

Conclusion

The absence of these six parameters; alone or in various combinations, was unable to rule-out meningitis in all patients presenting to our ED with a first-episode of psychotic behavior. When the underlying etiology of psychotic behavior is not obvious, the clinician should adopt a low threshold to perform a lumbar puncture.
Keywords:Index presentation psychosis  First-episode psychosis  First-presentation psychosis  Lumbar puncture  Meningitis
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