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. 2022 Jan 3;23:1. doi: 10.1186/s12868-021-00688-3

Table 1.

Diagnostic criteria for intracranial infection

Definitive diagnosis of an infection Aetiological diagnosis: culture of pathogenic bacteria in CSF or positive immunological identification of pathogenic microorganisms in CSF
Diagnosis of a potential infection

(1) Fever (temperature ≥ 38 °C), headache, stiff neck, meningeal signs, cranial nerve signs, and/or irritability with no other recognized cause

(2) Examination of CSF released by lumbar puncture: cloudy, intracranial pressure > 200 mmH2O, white blood cell count >  50 × 106/L, glucose < 2.2 mmol/L or a CSF glucose/serum glucose ratio < 0.4, CSF protein > 0.45 g/L [9]

(3) CT or MRI findings: meningitis often indicates diffuse brain oedema; ventriculitis indicates ventricular dilatation or fluid level in the ventricle; circular enhancement can be seen in brain abscesses

CT: computed tomography; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging