Cause
Meningitis is a disease that can be passed from person
to person (contagious). It is caused most often by viruses or bacteria that
infect the tissues (meninges
) and sometimes the fluid (cerebral spinal
fluid, or CSF) that surround the brain and spinal cord.
Viral meningitis
Enteroviruses are the most common cause of viral
meningitis. They can live in your
intestines without causing illness. However, they can
cause meningitis when they are passed from one person to another through food,
water, or contaminated objects. Meningitis caused by enteroviruses occurs most
often in babies and young children.
In rare cases, other viruses, such as
human immunodeficiency (HIV) or
mumps, may cause meningitis.
Bacterial meningitis
Immunizations continue to help prevent childhood bacterial
meningitis. Most people who get bacterial meningitis get it from one of two
types of bacteria:
Streptococcus pneumoniae or
Neisseria meningitidis.1
These bacteria often live in the body, most often in the nose
and throat, without causing illness. However, the bacteria can cause meningitis
if they get into the bloodstream and travel to the
cerebrospinal fluid or the tissues (meninges) that
surround the brain and spinal cord. These bacteria also can be passed from one
person to another, usually through infected saliva or mucus.
Two other bacteria that sometimes cause meningitis are
group B streptococci and
Listeria monocytogenes.
Meningitis caused by group B streptococci bacteria occurs most often in
newborns, who can become infected during or after birth. Meningitis caused by
Listeria monocytogenes bacteria occurs most often in
newborns and in older adults.
The Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada (SOGC)
recommends screening for group B streptococci in all pregnant women at 35 to 37
weeks. Women who have the bacteria are given antibiotics during labour in order
to prevent infection in their newborns, and this practise has worked
well.2
In rare cases, other bacteria cause meningitis, usually in people
with long-term medical conditions.
Meningitis also can be caused by
other organisms and conditions. It can be a
complication of an illness, an injury (particularly to the skull or face), or
brain surgery.
How meningitis is spread
Organisms that cause meningitis can be passed from one person to
another or passed from rodents and insects to people. However, exposure to an
organism that causes meningitis does not mean you will get the
infection.
Organisms can be passed from one person to another:
- During birth. A mother can pass organisms
that cause meningitis to her baby even if the mother does not have symptoms.
Delivering a baby by caesarean section rather than through the birth canal does
not always protect the baby from getting the infection. Both bacteria and
viruses can be transmitted this way.
- Through stool. Stool could
have enteroviruses or certain types of bacteria in it.
Washing hands on a regular basis can help prevent you
and your children from getting infected this way. More children than adults get
meningitis this way.
- Through coughing and sneezing. Infected people
can pass certain bacteria that are normally found in saliva or mucus in their
noses and throats.
- Through kissing, sexual contact, or contact
with infected blood. The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) also can cause
meningitis and can be passed from an infected person to another person through
blood or sexual contact, but not through kissing.
Rarely, some organisms that cause meningitis can be passed to
people from rodents and insects. The most common of these are arboviruses
(including the St. Louis encephalitis and West Nile viruses), which are
transmitted through dust and food contaminated by the urine of infected mice,
hamsters, and rats.