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    Subjects/Microbiology/Systemic Bacteriology
    Systemic Bacteriology
    medium
    bug Microbiology

    An 18 year old female presents with a severe headache and high fever of 101°F. On examination, papilloedema and nuchal rigidity was present. Gram staining of the CSF is shown below. Causative organism is

    A. Haemophilus influenzae type B
    B. Neisseria meningitides
    C. Stretptococcus pneumoniae
    D. Listeria monocytogenes

    Explanation

    ## Correct Answer: B. Neisseria meningitides The clinical presentation—acute meningitis in an 18-year-old with severe headache, high fever (101°F), papilloedema, and nuchal rigidity—is classic for bacterial meningitis. The Gram stain showing **gram-negative diplococci** (kidney or coffee-bean shaped) is the discriminating morphological feature that identifies **Neisseria meningitidis**. This organism is the leading cause of meningitis in adolescents and young adults in India and globally. N. meningitidis is an obligate human pathogen transmitted via respiratory droplets, causing fulminant meningitis with rapid progression. The CSF typically shows elevated protein, low glucose, and pleocytosis with neutrophil predominance. The gram-negative diplococcal morphology is pathognomonic—no other common meningitis pathogen presents this way. N. meningitidis is also associated with petechial rash (meningococcemia), though not mentioned here. Empiric therapy in India includes ceftriaxone or cefotaxime (third-generation cephalosporins), which are the DOC for meningococcal meningitis per IAP and ICMR guidelines. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Haemophilus influenzae type B** — While Hib was historically a leading cause of meningitis in children <5 years in India (pre-Hib vaccine era), it is now rare due to universal Hib vaccination. Hib is a **gram-negative coccobacillus** (pleomorphic, not diplococci), morphologically distinct from the gram-negative diplococci shown. Hib meningitis typically occurs in unvaccinated infants and young children, not 18-year-olds. This is an age-mismatch trap. **C. Streptococcus pneumoniae** — S. pneumoniae is a **gram-positive diplococcus** (lancet-shaped), not gram-negative. Although pneumococcal meningitis is common in India and presents similarly clinically, the Gram stain morphology is opposite. This is the classic NBE morphology trap—both cause meningitis, but gram stain differentiates them. Pneumococcal meningitis is more common in elderly and immunocompromised; meningococcal in young adults. **D. Listeria monocytogenes** — Listeria is a **gram-positive rod** (short, slender, sometimes coccobacillary), not a gram-negative diplococcus. Listeria meningitis occurs in neonates, elderly, and immunocompromised patients—not typically in healthy 18-year-olds. It is rare in India. The morphology and epidemiology both exclude this option. ## High-Yield Facts - **Gram-negative diplococci** (kidney/coffee-bean shaped) = Neisseria meningitidis on Gram stain—pathognomonic morphology. - **N. meningitidis** is the leading cause of meningitis in adolescents and young adults; transmitted via respiratory droplets. - **Empiric DOC for meningococcal meningitis**: Ceftriaxone 2 g IV 4-hourly or Cefotaxime 2 g IV 4-hourly (third-generation cephalosporins). - **Petechial rash** on trunk/extremities is a hallmark sign of meningococcemia; indicates poor prognosis if present. - **CSF profile in meningococcal meningitis**: Elevated protein (100–500 mg/dL), low glucose (<40 mg/dL), neutrophil pleocytosis (>1000 cells/μL). - **Hib vaccination** (part of pentavalent in IAP schedule) has made Haemophilus influenzae meningitis rare in vaccinated cohorts in India. ## Mnemonics **Gram-Negative Diplococci Meningitis Causes** **N**eisseria meningitidis is the only common gram-negative diplococcus causing meningitis. (Moraxella catarrhalis is gram-negative but causes respiratory, not CNS, disease.) Memory: **N for Negative diplococcus**. **Meningitis Organisms by Age (Indian Context)** **Neonates**: GBS, Listeria, E. coli K1. **Infants/Children <5y**: Hib (if unvaccinated), Pneumococcus. **Adolescents/Young Adults**: **Neisseria meningitidis** (peak 15–25 years). **Elderly**: Pneumococcus, Listeria. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs meningitis with multiple gram-positive organisms (pneumococcus, Listeria) to lure students into morphology confusion. The Gram stain result is the discriminator—gram-negative diplococci exclude all other common causes and point uniquely to N. meningitidis. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian emergency departments, when you see an 18-year-old with acute meningitis and the Gram stain shows gram-negative diplococci, start ceftriaxone immediately without waiting for culture confirmation—meningococcal meningitis can progress to septic shock and death within hours. Prophylaxis (rifampicin or ciprofloxacin) for close contacts is mandatory per ICMR guidelines. _Reference: Jawetz, Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology Ch. 18 (Neisseria); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine Ch. 383 (Meningitis)_

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