Toxoplasmosis

Background

  • Most common cause of focal encephalitis in patients with AIDS

Clinical Features

  1. Headache
  2. Fever
  3. Focal neurologic deficits
  4. AMS
  5. Seizures

Diagnosis

  • Head CT w/o contrast
    • Shows multiple subcortical lesions w/ predilection for basal ganglia
    • Contrast usually not needed; if obtained, will show ring enhancing lesions
  • CSF
    • Helpful but high rate of false negatives

DDX

  • Lymphoma
    • More commonly single lesion in the periventricular white matter or corpus callosum
  • Cerebral TB
    • Characteristic inflammatory appearance w/ isodense exudate filling basal cisterns
  • Fungal infection

Treatment

Antibiotics

Immunocompetent

Antibiotics only needed if patient has severe symptoms

Immunosprepressed

OR

Pregnant

  • Spiramycin 1g PO q8hrs[1]
    • If amniotic fluid is positive treat with 3 weeks of pyrimethamine (50 mg/day orally) + sulfadiazine (3 g/day orally in 2-3 divided doses)
    • Alternate with a 3-week course of Spiramycin 1 g 3 times daily OR
  • Pyrimethamine (25 mg/day orally) and sulfadiazine (4 g/day orally) divided 2 or 4 times daily until delivery AND
    • Leucovorin 10-25 mg/day orally to prevent bone marrow suppression
  • Dapsone 50mg PO QD; Off label use

Congenital/Pediatric

  • Pyrimethamine 2mg/kg/day PO x 2 days then 1mg/kg/day x 2-6 months, then 1mg/kg MWF AND
  • Duration: 12 months for congenital toxoplasmosis
  • Alternative: TMP/SMX 5mg/kg (TMP) PO/IV q12hrs
  • Clindamycin 20-30mg/kg/day PO/IV divided q6hrs (max 2.4g/day) if sulfa allergic
  • Spiramycin 50-100mg/kg/day PO divided q8hrs

Steroids

  • Consider dexamethasone 4mg IV q6hr for significant edema or mass effect

Folinic Acid

Administer if the treatment regimen includes Leucovorin

  • Folinic acid 10mg PO QD x6–8wk

Disposition

  • Admit

Source

  • Tintinalli
  1. Paquet C, Yudin MH. Toxoplasmosis in pregnancy: prevention, screening, and treatment. J Obstet Gynaecol Can. Jan 2013;35(1):78-9.