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Spondylitis Tuberculosis: Christian Kamallan Neurology Department - UWKS

This document summarizes spondylitis tuberculosis (Pott's disease), which is a form of spinal tuberculosis caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It spreads hematogenously to the vertebrae and causes destruction of the disk space and vertebral bodies, leading to kyphosis. Symptoms include back pain, neurological deficits, and cold abscesses. Diagnosis involves imaging, biopsy, and culture. Treatment is with antitubercular drugs for 9-12 months, and sometimes surgery is needed for advanced cases or neurological involvement. Prognosis is generally good with treatment but it can cause long-term deformity and disability if not treated properly.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
58 views50 pages

Spondylitis Tuberculosis: Christian Kamallan Neurology Department - UWKS

This document summarizes spondylitis tuberculosis (Pott's disease), which is a form of spinal tuberculosis caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis. It spreads hematogenously to the vertebrae and causes destruction of the disk space and vertebral bodies, leading to kyphosis. Symptoms include back pain, neurological deficits, and cold abscesses. Diagnosis involves imaging, biopsy, and culture. Treatment is with antitubercular drugs for 9-12 months, and sometimes surgery is needed for advanced cases or neurological involvement. Prognosis is generally good with treatment but it can cause long-term deformity and disability if not treated properly.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Spondylitis tuberculosis

Christian Kamallan
Neurology Department - UWKS
• Pott's disease/Pott's spine: (Sir Percival Pott, 1779)
– destruction of the disk space and the adjacent
vertebral bodies
– destruction of other spinal elements
– severe and progressive kyphosis
Epidemiology
• The exact incidence and prevalence of spinal
tuberculosis in most parts of the world are not
known. In countries with a high burden of
pulmonary tuberculosis, the incidence is
expected to be proportionately high
• The risk of developing tuberculosis is estimated
to be 20–37 times greater in people co-infected
with HIV than among those without HIV
infection; 90% of these cases were concentrated
in the African and South East Asian regions
Pathogenesis and pathology
• Predisposing factors: poverty, overcrowding,
illiteracy, malnutrition, alcoholism, drug
abuse, diabetes mellitus, immunosuppressive
treatment, and HIV infection.
• Genetic susceptibility has recently been
demonstrated. FokI polymorphism in the
vitamin-D receptor gene
• Hematogenous spread of M. tuberculosis into the
dense vasculature of cancellous bone of the
vertebral bodies
– arterial arcade - derived from anterior and posterior
spinal arteries; this arcade form a rich vascular plexus.
This vascular plexus facilitates hematogenous spread
of the infection in the paradiskal regions
– venous system may be responsible for central
vertebral body lesions (Batson's paravertebral venous
plexus)
• Initially apparent in the anterior inferior portion of the
vertebral body. Later on it spreads into the central part of
the body or disk
• Paradiskal, anterior, and central lesions are the common
types of vertebral involvement.
• In the central lesion, the disk is not involved, and collapse
of the vertebral body produces vertebra plana. Vertebra
plana indicates complete compression of the vertebral
body.
• In younger patients, the disk is primarily involved because it
is more vascularized.
• In old age, the disk is not primarily involved because of its
age-related avascularity.
Types of vertebral involvement
Spondylitis Tb: Character
• Destruction of the intervertebral disk space and the
adjacent vertebral bodies
• Collapse of the spinal elements
• Anterior wedging leading to the characteristic
angulation and gibbus (palpable deformity because of
involvement of multiple vertebrae) formation.
• The upper lumbar and lower thoracic spine are most
frequently involved sites.
• More than one vertebra is typically affected
• Distortion of spinal column leads to spinal deformities
Lateral radiography shows severe kyphosis
Clinical features
• Local pain, local tenderness, stiffness and
spasm of the muscles, a cold abscess, gibbus,
and a prominent spinal deformity.
• The cold abscess slowly develops when
tuberculous infection extends to adjacent
ligaments and soft tissues.
Cold abscess is characterized by lack of
pain and other signs of inflammation
Gibbus formation
• Progression of spinal tuberculosis is slow and
insidious.
• The total duration of the illness varies with
average ranging from 4 to 11 months.
• Usually, patients seek advice only when there
is severe pain, marked deformity, or
neurological symptoms.
• The classical constitutional features (indicating
presence of an active disease): malaise, loss of
weight and appetite, night sweats, evening
rise in temperature, generalized body aches,
and fatigue
• Back pain is the most frequent
• Pain is typically localized to the site of
involvement and is most common in the
thoracic region.
• The pain may be aggravated by spinal motion,
coughing, and weight bearing, because of
advanced disk disruption and spinal instability,
nerve root compression, or pathological
fracture.
• Neurologic deficits are common
• Left untreated  early neurologic
involvement may progress to complete
paraplegia or tetraplegia.
• Paraplegia may occur at any time and during
any stage of the vertebral disease.
Cold abscess - Abscess formation is common
and can grow to a very large size.
The site of cold abscess depends on the region
of the vertebral column affected.
• Spinal deformity is a hallmark feature of spinal
tuberculosis.
• Type of spinal deformity depends on the
location of the tuberculous vertebral lesion.
• Kyphosis, the most common spinal deformity,
occurs with lesions involving thoracic
vertebrae. The severity of the kyphosis
depends on the number of vertebrae involved.
Diagnosis
• Clinical
• Neuroimaging findings
• Etiological confirmation - demonstration of
acid-fast bacilli on microscopy or culture of
material obtained following biopsy the lesion.
Polymerase chain reaction is also an effective
method for bacteriological diagnosis of
tuberculosis
Imaging
• Plain radiographs - rarefaction of the vertebral
end plates, loss of disk height, osseous
destruction, new-bone formation and soft-tissue
abscess
• Computed tomography - pattern of bone
destruction, tissue involvement and paraspinal
tissue abscess.
– CT is of the greatest value in the delineation of
encroachment of the spinal canal by posterior
extension of inflammatory tissue, bone or disk
material, and in the CT-guided biopsy
• Magnetic resonance imaging - imaging of
choice.
– MRI is more sensitive than x-ray
– More specific than CT
in the diagnosis of spinal tuberculosis.
MRI: rapid determination of the mechanism for
neurologic involvement
X-Ray and MRI: destruction of C6–C7
Differential diagnosis
• Pyogenic spondylitis, brucellar spondylitis,
sarcoidosis, metastasis, multiple myeloma,
and lymphoma
Treatment
• Antituberculous treatment should be started
as early as possible
• Majority (82–95%) patients of spinal
tuberculosis respond very well to medical
treatment.
• The treatment response: pain relief, decrease
in neurological deficit, and correction of spinal
deformity
Therapeutic regimen
• Category-1 antituberculosis treatment regimen:
– Intensive (initial) phase: 2-month combination of four
first-line drugs: isoniazid, rifampicin, streptomycin,
and pyrazinamide
– Continuation phase: two drugs (isoniazid and
rifampicin) are given for 4 months.
• Because of the serious risk of disability and
mortality and because of difficulties of assessing
treatment response, WHO recommends 9
months of treatment for tuberculosis of bones or
joints.
WHO recommended treatment regimens
Supportive measures
• Ambulatory care without prolonged
recumbency and rest.
• Cast or brace immobilization, a classic form of
treatment, was found to be inefficient and has
generally been abandoned
Surgery
ATT Antituberculous Treament
Case 1
• A Bangladesh man, 20-year-old with 6-month history of anorexia
and weight loss.
• The physical examination was remarkable for a temperature of
39°C.
• Chest radiography showed a mass that appeared to be located in
the posterior mediastinum (Panel A, white arrows).
• Computed tomography (CT) of the chest showed a paravertebral
mass of soft tissue surrounding the vertebra (Panel B, white
arrows), with destruction of vertebral bodies (black arrow). The
mass extended from T1 to T5.
• Magnetic resonance imaging revealed compression and posterior
displacement of the spinal cord without infiltration from the mass
(Panel C, arrows).
• A specimen of the mass was obtained with CT-
guided aspiration.
• The results of Ziehl–Neelsen staining of the tissue
were positive, and Mycobacterium
tuberculosis grew in a culture of the tissue,
indicating Pott's disease.
• Antituberculous chemotherapy was prescribed.
Subsequent radiographic studies showed that the
mass had regressed, and the patient's clinical
symptoms resolved within 3 months.
Case 2
• A 13-year-old boy: Increasing kyphotic deformity,
back pain, and progressive paraparesis seven
years after a one-year course of medical therapy
for tuberculosis.
• He reported shock-like sensations in his legs
whenever he bent forward and fatigue in his
thighs and calves, which limited his activities.
• Physical findings included a rigid gibbus (Panel A,
arrow), inability to tiptoe, hyperreflexia of the
ankles with mild clonus, and normal
proprioception and sensation to light touch.
• MRI (Panel C): the bodies of T9 through L1 had
collapsed into one mass, compressing the spinal
cord to about half its usual diameter (large arrow)
and kinking his aorta (small arrow).
• He underwent a single operative procedure
including anterior decompression and
vertebrectomy with strut grafting with
autologous iliac bone and rib (Panel D, arrow)
followed by posterior spinal instrumentation and
fusion.
• Histologic examination and culture showed no
active tuberculous disease, and no further
medical treatment was given.
• As of the most recent follow-up three years
later (Panel B), he had made a complete
neurologic recovery and was participating in
all noncontact sports at his high school.
Prognosis
• Generally good in patients without
neurological deficit and deformity
Conclusion
• Improved by early diagnosis and rapid
intervention
• Medical treatment is generally effective
• Surgical intervention is necessary in advanced
cases (marked bony involvement, abscess
formation, or paraplegia)
• Affects young people, so efforts should be
made for its effective prevention.
Cerebral Malaria
• P. falciparum may progress rapidly to a lethal
multisystem disease.
• The clinical manifestations of severe malaria depend
on age.
• Hypoglycemia, convulsions, and severe anemia are
relatively more common in children;
• Acute renal failure, jaundice, and pulmonary edema
are more common in adults.

• Cerebral malaria (with coma), shock, and acidosis,


which often terminate in respiratory arrest, may occur
at any age.
• A lumbar puncture should be performed in
patients with cerebral malaria to rule out
bacterial meningitis.
• Vital signs, including a patient's coma score, urine
output, blood glucose level, and if possible,
lactate level, arterial pH, and blood gas levels,
should be monitored as frequently as possible.
• The parasite count should be measured at least
twice a day in all patients.
Treatment
• Parenteral chloroquine; but if there is any
uncertainty about resistance, quinine or
quinidine should be used.
• Quinine and quinidine should be given by
intravenous infusion — never by bolus
injection.
• Sodium artesunate solution is given by
intravenous or intramuscular injection.
Artemether is more stable than artesunate.

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