What are the symptoms of meningitis recurrence

Different meningitis recurrence symptoms are different, more likely to recur meningitis are the following: first, tuberculous meningitis; second, fungal meningitis. The recurrence of tuberculous meningitis is characterized by severe headache, accompanied by visual disturbances, diplopia, and limited eye movement, and some patients may have low-grade fever, malaise, low-grade fever mainly in the afternoon, accompanied by nausea and vomiting. Other patients may have hemiplegia and numbness of one side of the limbs, and at this time, they should go to the hospital for cranial magnetic resonance plus enhancement scanning and lumbar puncture examination. The recurrence of fungal meningitis may be characterized by severe headache, prolonged low-grade fever with nausea and vomiting, walking incoordination, ataxia, blurred vision, and psychiatric symptoms, which need to be clarified by cerebrospinal fluid culture.