Search
SectionsIndexFirst Aid
  • Blood Disorders
  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Cancer
  • Children's Health Issues
  • Digestive Disorders
  • Disorders of Nutrition
  • Drugs
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Fundamentals
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders
  • Hormonal and Metabolic Disorders
  • Immune Disorders
  • Infections
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders
  • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Lung and Airway Disorders
  • Men's Health Issues
  • Mental Health Disorders
  • Mouth and Dental Disorders
  • Older People's Health Issues
  • Skin Disorders
  • Special Subjects
  • Women's Health Issues
ABCDEFGHI
JKLMNOPQR
STUVWXYZ
  • Emergencies
  • Cardiac Arrest
  • Choking
  • Drowning
  • Injuries
  • Altitude Illness
  • Bee Stings
  • Bites, Animal
  • Bites, Human
  • Bites, Snake
  • Burns
  • Electrical Injuries
  • Eye, Blunt Injury to
  • Eye, Chemical Burns of
  • Fractures
  • Frostbite
  • Head Injury
  • Heatstroke
  • Hypoithermia
  • Lightning Injuries
  • Shock
  • Sprains and Strains
  • Wounds
In This Topic
Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
Brain Infections
Central Nervous System Infections
Back to Top
Resources
  • About The Merck Manual Home Health Handbook Online Version
  • Anatomical Drawings
  • The One-Page Merck Manual of Health
  • Multimedia
  • Pronunciations
  • Selected Links
  • Weights and Measures
  • Common Medical Tests
  • Drug Names: Generic and Trade
  • Resources for Help and Information
Manuals available online
'/professional/index.html' + bookPageLink
 
'/home/index.html'
These and other Manuals available
in print, online, and as mobile applications.

See more at MerckManuals.com
Sections in Patients & Caregivers
  • Blood Disorders
  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Cancer
  • Children's Health Issues
  • Digestive Disorders
  • Disorders of Nutrition
  • Drugs
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Fundamentals
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders
  • Hormonal and Metabolic Disorders
  • Immune Disorders
  • Infections
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders
  • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Lung and Airway Disorders
  • Men's Health Issues
  • Mental Health Disorders
  • Mouth and Dental Disorders
  • Older People's Health Issues
  • Skin Disorders
  • Special Subjects
  • Women's Health Issues
Chapters in Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Biology of the Nervous System
  • Symptoms and Diagnosis of Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Pain
  • Headaches
  • Sleep Disorders
  • Brain Dysfunction
  • Delirium and Dementia
  • Coma and Impaired Consciousness
  • Seizure Disorders
  • Stroke (CVA)
  • Tumors of the Nervous System
  • Brain Infections
  • Meningitis
  • Prion Diseases
  • Movement Disorders
  • Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and Related Disorders
  • Spinal Cord Disorders
  • Peripheral Nerve Disorders
  • Cranial Nerve Disorders
  • Craniocervical Junction Disorders
  • Autonomic Nervous System Disorders
Topics in Brain Infections
  • Central Nervous System Infections
  • Rabies
  • Encephalitis
  • Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy
  • Abscess of the Brain
  • Subdural Empyema
  • Parasitic Brain Infections
 
  • Merck Manual
  • >
  • Patients & Caregivers
  • >
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • >
  • Brain Infections
  • 4
 
Central Nervous System Infections

Share This

The central nervous system consists of the brain and spinal cord. These organs are remarkably resistant to infection, but when they become infected, the consequences are often very serious. Infections may be caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi, or, occasionally, protozoa or parasites. Another group of brain disorders that resemble infections, called spongiform encephalopathies, are caused by prions, which are abnormal protein molecules (see Prion Diseases: Overview of Prion Diseases).

Infections usually cause inflammation. For example, infection can cause encephalitis, which is inflammation of the brain. Infections that involve the fluid-filled space within the layers of tissue (meninges) that cover the brain and spinal cord are called meningitis (see see Meningitis). Often, bacterial meningitis spreads to the brain, causing encephalitis. Similarly, viral infections that cause encephalitis often also cause meningitis. Thus, usually when bacterial meningitis or viral encephalitis develops, the resulting disorder is technically meningoencephalitis. However, infection that affects mainly the subarachnoid space and meninges is usually called meningitis, and infection that affects mainly the brain is usually called encephalitis.

In meningitis and encephalitis, inflammation occurs throughout the brain and, in meningitis, throughout the spinal cord. But sometimes infection is confined to one area (localized) as a collection of pus, called an empyema or an abscess depending on where it is located. An abscess, which resembles a boil, can form anywhere in the body, including the brain. Fungi (such as aspergilli), protozoa (such as Toxoplasma gondii), and parasites (such as Taenia solium may cause a localized brain infection similar to an abscess.

Bacteria and other infectious organisms can reach the meninges and other areas of the brain in several ways:

  • By being carried by the blood
  • By entering the brain directly from the outside (for example, through a skull fracture or during surgery on the brain)
  • By spreading from nearby infected structures, such as the sinuses or middle ear

Last full review/revision May 2008 by Michael Jacewicz, MD

Buy the Book

Mobile Versions

Pronunciations

empyema

encephalitis

meninges

meningitis

subarachnoid

taenia solium

Back to Top

Previous: Introduction

Next: Rabies

Audio
Figures
Photographs
Pronunciations
Sidebar
Tables
Videos

Copyright     © 2010-2013 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, N.J., U.S.A.    Privacy    Terms of Use