Clinical meaning
Bacterial meningitis is a life-threatening infection of the meninges (pia mater and arachnoid mater) and subarachnoid space, causing a robust inflammatory response that can lead to cerebral edema, increased intracranial pressure, cerebral infarction, and death within hours if untreated. Understanding the pathophysiology of blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption and the inflammatory cascade is essential for nurses because it explains the urgency of antibiotic administration, the rationale for dexamethasone, and the expected CSF findings.
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is formed by specialized cerebral endothelial cells connected by tight junctions (occludin, claudin, ZO-1 proteins), surrounded by pericytes, and ensheathed by astrocyte end-feet. This barrier normally prevents circulating pathogens, immune cells, and large molecules from entering the CNS. Bacterial meningitis begins when pathogens breach this barrier through several mechanisms: (1) Hematogenous spread: bacteria in the bloodstream (bacteremia) attach to cerebral endothelial cells via surface adhesins, cross the endothelial layer via transcytosis or paracellular invasion, and enter the CSF. (2) Contiguous spread: from adjacent infected structures (sinusitis, otitis media, mastoiditis). (3) Direct inoculation: through skull fractures, neurosurgical procedures, or CSF shunts.
Once bacteria enter the subarachnoid space, the inflammatory cascade escalates rapidly: Bacterial cell wall components (lipopolysaccharide from gram-negative organisms, lipoteichoic acid and peptidoglycan from gram-positive organisms) activate resident microglia and meningeal macrophages via toll-like receptors (TLR-2, TLR-4). These cells release pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6) and chemokines that recruit neutrophils from the bloodstream. Neutrophil infiltration through the disrupted BBB causes vasogenic and cytotoxic edema. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMP-8, MMP-9) released by neutrophils further degrade the BBB tight junction proteins, creating a positive feedback loop of increasing permeability and inflammation.