Meningitis: lack of jolt accentuation helped rule out pleocytosis
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Clinical bottom line (level 2b)
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Two-thirds of patients with a recent-onset fever and a headache had CSF pleocytosis
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No jolt accentuation made CSF pleocytosis much less likely.
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Neck stiffness made CSF pleocytosis more likely.
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Uchihara and Tsukagoshi:
Headache
1991;
31:
167-171
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Expires
November 2003
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The study
Setting: acute hospital, Japan
54 patients
(aged
range 15 to 71 years; mean 39,
52%
female)
with recent-onset headache (within 2 weeks)
Excluded if
not conscious enough to answer questions satisfactorily
focal neurological abnormality
chronic recurrent headache (migraine or muscle contraction headache)
Independent ?blinded
reference standard, applied in
all
patients from a
consecutive appropriate
spectrum.
Reference standard:
- lumbar puncture: 5 or more white cells per cubic mm of CSF
Diagnostic test:
jolt accentuation: headache worsened on rotating head horizontally 2 or 3 times
The evidence
pre-test probability of CSF pleocytosis:
63%,
(95% CI:
51% to
76%)
| diagnostic test |
CSF pleocytosis |
no pleocytosis |
LR+ (95% CI) |
post-test probability |
LR- (95% CI) |
post-test probability |
| jolt accentuation |
33 |
8 |
2.4
(1.4 to
4.2)
|
80% |
0.049
(0.0069 to
0.35)
|
8% |
| neck stiffness |
5 |
0 |
inf
(1.1 to
infinity)
|
100% |
0.85
(0.74 to
0.98)
|
59% |
| positive Kernig's sign |
3 |
0 |
inf
(0.63 to
infinity)
|
100% |
0.91
(0.82 to
1.0)
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61% |
| total |
34 |
20 |
Comments
- No other clinical features usefully predicted pleocytosis.
- Poor characterisation of the population studied makes generalising these results difficult.
Citation
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Uchihara
T,
and
Tsukagoshi
H:
jolt accentuation of headache: the most sensitive sign of CSF pleocytosis.
Headache
1991;
31:
167-171
Contributor: Chris Ball and Clare Wotton,
November 1999
Reviewer: Luis Ruiz Del Fresno
Clinical Question.
| Patient |
headache and fever |
| Intervention or Exposure |
jolt accentuation test |
| Outcome |
CSF pleocytosis |
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