Viral Meningitis

ByJohn E. Greenlee, MD, University of Utah Health
Reviewed/Revised Nov 2022
View Patient Education

(See also Overview of Meningitis.)

Viral meningitis is sometimes used synonymously with aseptic meningitis. However, aseptic meningitis usually refers to acute meningitis caused by anything other than the bacteria that typically cause acute bacterial meningitis. Thus, aseptic meningitis can be caused by viruses, noninfectious conditions (eg, drugs, disorders), fungi, or, occasionally, other organisms (eg, Borrelia burgdorferi in Lyme disease, Treponema pallidum in syphilis).

Unlike bacterial meningitis, viral meningitis usually spares the brain parenchyma. (Parenchyma is affected in viral encephalitis or meningoencephalitis.)

Causes of Viral Meningitis

Viral meningitis usually results from hematogenous spread, but meningitis due to herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) or varicella-zoster virus can also result from reactivation of latent infection. Recurrent attacks of viral meningitis in women are usually due to HSV-2.

The most common cause of viral meningitis is

  • Enteroviruses

For many viruses that cause meningitis (unlike the bacteria that cause acute bacterial meningitis), incidence is seasonal (see table Common Causes of Viral Meningitis).

Table

Zika virus and Chikungunya virus are uncommon causes of meningitis, but these viruses should be considered in people who have traveled to endemic areas if they develop symptoms that suggest meningitis.

Occasionally, meningitis, usually accompanied by encephalitis, develops in patients with COVID-19. Rarely, meningitis in COVID-19 patients is due to coinfection by another virus (eg, varicella-zoster virus).

Symptoms and Signs of Viral Meningitis

Viral meningitis, like acute bacterial meningitis, usually begins with symptoms that suggest viral infection (eg, fever, myalgias, gastrointestinal or respiratory symptoms), followed by symptoms and signs of meningitis (headache, fever, nuchal rigidity). Manifestations tend to resemble those of bacterial meningitis but are usually less severe (eg, nuchal rigidity may be less pronounced). However, findings are sometimes severe enough to suggest acute bacterial meningitis. Because brain parenchyma is spared, delirium, confusion, seizures, and focal or global neurologic deficits are absent.

Diagnosis of Viral Meningitis

  • Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis (cell count, protein, glucose)

  • Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of CSF and sometimes IgM

  • Sometimes PCR and/or culture of blood, a throat swab, nasopharyngeal secretions, or stool

Diagnosis of viral meningitis is based on analysis of CSF obtained by lumbar puncture (preceded by neuroimaging if increased intracranial pressure or a mass is suspected). Typically, protein is slightly increased but less than that in acute bacterial meningitis (eg, < 150 mg/dL); however, the protein level can be very high in West Nile virus meningitis. Glucose is usually normal or only slightly lower than normal. Other findings include pleocytosis with a lymphocytic predominance. Nonetheless, no combination of findings in CSF cells, protein, and glucose can rule out bacterial meningitis. Bacterial meningitis is eventually ruled out if no bacteria grow in CSF cultures. However, if a patient with bacterial meningitis took antibiotics (ie, was partially treated) before blood cultures and lumbar puncture, CSF findings may resemble those of viral meningitis; thus, if patients were partially treated, empirical antibiotic treatment for bacterial meningitis may be warranted even though viral meningitis is suspected.

CSF viral culture is insensitive and not routinely done. PCR can be used to detect some viruses in CSF (enteroviruses and herpes simplex, herpes zoster, West Nile viruses); a multiplex film-array PCR panel can be used to rapidly screen for multiple bacteria and viruses. Measurement of IgM in CSF is more sensitive than PCR in diagnosing suspected West Nile virus or other arboviruses.

Patients with HSV-2 meningitis may have enlarged mononuclear cells (Mollaret cells) in the CSF. HSV-2 meningitis often recurs (called Mollaret meningitis).

Viral serologic tests, PCR, or culture of samples taken from other areas (eg, blood, a throat swab, nasopharyngeal secretions, stool) may help identify the causative virus.

Pearls & Pitfalls

  • If patients appear seriously ill, treat them for acute bacterial meningitis until it is ruled out, even if the cause is suspected to be viral.

Treatment of Viral Meningitis

  • Supportive measures

If patients appear seriously ill and if acute bacterial seems possible (even if viral meningitis is suspected), appropriate antibiotics and corticosteroids are started immediately (without waiting for test results) and continued until bacterial meningitis is ruled out (ie, no bacteria grow in CSF cultures).

Viral meningitis usually resolves spontaneously over weeks or, occasionally (eg, in West Nile virus meningitis or lymphocytic choriomeningitis), months. Treatment is mainly supportive.

herpes simplex meningitis and can be used to treat herpes zoster meningitis

Pleconaril is only modestly efficacious for meningitis due to enteroviruses and is not available for routine clinical use.

Patients with HIV meningitis are treated with antiretroviral drugs.

Key Points

  • Viral meningitis begins with symptoms typical of a viral illness, followed by headache, fever, and nuchal rigidity, but is rarely as severe as acute bacterial meningitis.

  • Enteroviruses are the most common cause, usually causing infection during summer or early autumn.

  • CSF findings (usually lymphocytic pleocytosis, near normal glucose, and slightly increased protein) cannot exclude acute bacterial meningitis.

  • Treat patients for acute bacterial meningitis until that diagnosis is ruled out.

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