Meningomyelitis is an infectious disease of the central nervous system, which is transmitted mainly through respiratory tract infection, as a result of inhalation of droplets containing meningococcal bacteria, leading to nasopharyngeal infection, sepsis after entering the blood circulation, and septicemia after the lesions are confined to the meninges and spinal cord membranes. Clinically, the patient mainly presents with severe headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, petechiae and petechiae on the skin, and neck stiffness. The cerebrospinal fluid examination is septic, and the disease is caused by inhalation of saliva and droplets containing pathogenic bacteria when the patient coughs, sneezes, or speaks, either by the infectious agent or by the patient who is suffering from the disease.