Publication

Preoperative C-reactive protein predicts the need for repeated intracerebral brain abscess drainage

Journal Paper/Review - Jan 24, 2015

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Neidert M, Karlin K, Actor B, Regli L, Bozinov O, Burkhardt J. Preoperative C-reactive protein predicts the need for repeated intracerebral brain abscess drainage. Clin Neurol Neurosurg 2015; 131:26-30.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Clin Neurol Neurosurg 2015; 131
Publication Date
Jan 24, 2015
Issn Electronic
1872-6968
Pages
26-30
Brief description/objective

BACKGROUND
To determine predicting factors for repeated surgical drainage in patients with intracerebral brain abscesses.

METHODS
Patients operated between 01/2008 and 10/2013 with a single-burr-hole technique to drain an intracerebral brain abscess were included from our prospective database. Clinical and radiological characteristics were analyzed retrospectively and compared between patients requiring a single surgical abscess drainage (S group) vs. patients requiring multiple surgical abscess aspirations (M group).

RESULTS
Thirty-five patients (mean age 42.6 years, 14 females) including 27 patients in the S group and 8 in the M group were included in this study. Age, gender, causing bacterial agent, surgical technique and abscess volume were comparable for both groups. Preoperative mean C-reactive protein (CRP) (13.9 mg/l vs. 56.1 mg/l, p=0.015) was significantly higher in the M group. Preoperative mean leukocyte count (12.3×10(9)/l vs. 8.9×10(9)/l, p=0.050) was borderline significantly higher in the M group. Although the origin in the overall population was cryptogenic in 43% of the cases, this was never the case in the patient population needing multiple surgeries.

DISCUSSION
Patients with multiple intracerebral brain abscess aspirations showed significantly higher preoperative CRP values than patients who needed surgery only once. Patients with high CRP values at admission and obvious origin of infection might need closer radiographic as well as clinical and laboratory exams after surgery to earlier select patients, which need repeated surgery.