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Spinal Tuberculosis Dr. Monsif Iqbal Department of Surgery POF Hospital, Wah Cantt

Spinal Tuberculosis by Dr. Monsif Iqbal

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This is the case presentation of a middle aged lady who presented with severe backache for the last one month with topic review after the case presentation

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Page 1: Spinal Tuberculosis by Dr. Monsif Iqbal

Spinal Tuberculosis

Dr. Monsif IqbalDepartment of Surgery

POF Hospital, Wah Cantt

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CASE PRESENTATION

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Patient Profile

• Name : Rukhsana• Age : 45 years• Sex : Female• Address : Wah Cantt• D.O.A : 26/06/2011• M.O.A : OPD

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• Presenting Complaints

– Severe Backacke 5-7 days

• History of present illness

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Past History

• h/o Cholecystectomy 01 month back

• Diagnosed as a case of HCV 01 month back

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Drug HISTORY

• No histroy of any drug intake

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PHYSICAL EXAMINATION

1. GPE:A middle aged lady, lying in bedHis vitals are;– Pulse: 85/min– B.P: 130/80 mm of Hg– Oxygen Sat: 96%– Temp: AfebrileRest of GPE unremarkable.

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NEUROLOGICAL EXAMINATION

• Tenderness in the lumbar spine (L1, L2)• SLR – Right 60 degress– Left 70 degrees

• Sensory system intact• Motor system intact• Reflexes normal• Plantars downgoing

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Rest of the systemic examination

• Abdomen– Cholecystectomy scar

• Chest– NAD

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Investigations on the day of admission

• Blood CP• ESR• LFTs• X-ray Lumbo-sacral Spine

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X-Ray Chest (PA view)

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T1 weighted image

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T2 weighted image

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T1 weighted Slide

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T2 weighted Slide

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• So clinically the diagnosis of Spinal Tuberculosis was made

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Spinal Tuberculosis

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Introduction

• According to WHO(2010), about one third of the world’s population is infected by Mycobacterium TB, and 9 million individuals develop TB each year

• One third of total TB population is in South-East Asia.

• Three percent are suffering from skeletal TB.

• Vertebral TB is the most common form of skeletal TB and accounts for 50% of all cases of skeletal TB.

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• The mortality rate is 27/100,000 of the population.

• Neurological complications are the most crippling complications of spinal TB

(Incidence : 10 to 43%).

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Spinal Tuberculosis

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Pathology of Spinal TB

• Spinal tuberculosis is usually a secondary infection from a primary site in the lung or genitourinary system.

• Spread to the spine is hematogenous in most instances.

• Delayed hypersensitivity immune reaction.

• The basic lesion is a combination of osteomyelitis and arthritis…. Affects the anterior part of vertebra…

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• Kyphosis• Paravertebral Abscess

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Clinical Presentation• Presentation depends on :

– Stage of disease,– Site– Presence of complications such as neurologic deficits, abscesses, or sinus tracts.

• Average duration of symptoms at the time of diagnosis is 3 – 4 months.

• Back pain is the earliest & most common symptom.

• Constitutional symptoms.

• Neurologic symptoms (50 % of cases).

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• Cervical spine Tuberculosis

• Spinal TB in HIV patients

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Spinal Tuberculosis Diagnosis

• Lab Studies– Mantoux / Tuberculin skin test ( purified protein derivative {PPD})

– ESR

– ELISA : for antibody to mycobacterial antigen-6 , sensitivity of 60 – 80%.

– PCR : sensitivity of 40% only.

– Brucella complement fixation test (useful in endemic areas as brucella can clinically mimic tuberculosis).

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– IFN – Release assays (IGRAs)

Recently, two in vitro assays that measure T-cell release of IFN in response to stimulation with the highly specific tuberculosis antigens ESAT- 6 & CFP-10 have become commercially available.

• Microbiology studies– Ziehl-Neelsen staining– Cultures positive in 50 % of the cases only

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Spinal Tuberculosis Diagnosis

• Radiological Diagnosis

– Plain Radiograph

– CT Scan

– MRI Spine

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Plain Radiograph• Typical tubercular spondylitic features in long standing paraspinal

abscesses – produce concave erosions around the anterior margins of the vertebral bodies

producing a scalloped appearance called the Aneurysmal phenomenon. – fusiform paraspinal soft tissue shadow with calcification in few .

• Skip lesions as involvement of non contiguous vertebrae (7 – 10 % cases).

• DEFORMITIES:1. Anterior wedging2. Gibbous deformity.3. Vertebra plana = single collapsed vertebra .

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wedge collapse of L1 and L2 vertebral bodies

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X-ray of the spine in a child showing complete destruction of D12 and L1 vertebral bodies leaving only

the pedicles.

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CT Scanning • CT scanning provides much better bony detail of irregular lytic

lesions, sclerosis, disk collapse, and disruption of bone circumference.

• Low-contrast resolution provides a better assessment of soft tissue, particularly in epidural and paraspinal areas.

• It detects early lesions and is more effective for defining the shape and calcification of soft tissue abscesses.

• In contrast to pyogenic disease, calcification is common in tuberculous lesions.

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MRI Spine

• MRI is the modality of choice as delineates leptomeningeal disease better, direct evaluation of intramedullary lesions, associated osseous signal change and epidural abscesses.

• Typical (spondylo-discitis) and atypical (spondylitis without discitis) types.

• Differentiate tuberculous spondylitis from pyogenic spondylitis

• most effective for demonstrating neural compression

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Patterns of Vertebral Involvement

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Deformities in Spinal Tuberculosis

• Kyphotic deformity (more common in thoracic spine) occurs as a consequence of collapse in the anterior spine

• Knuckle Kyphosis : forward wedging of one or two VB causing small kyphos

• Angular Kyphosis : wedge collapse of 3 or more VB

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Differential Diagnosis

• The differential diagnosis of the tuberculous spine includes:1. SPINAL INFECTIONS- pyogenic, brucella & fungal.2.NEOPLASTIC commonly lymphoma/ metastasis3.DEGENERATIVE

• No pathognomonic imaging signs allow tuberculosis to be readily distinguished from other conditions. Biopsy is definitive.

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Complications of Spinal Tuberculosis

• Paraplegia• Cold abscess• Spinal deformity• Sinuses• Secondary infection• Amyloid disease• Fatality

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What is Middle path regime?• Rest in bed

• Chemotherapy

• X-ray & ESR once in 3 months

• MRI/ CT at 6 months interval for 2 years

• Gradual mobilization is encouraged in absence of neural deficits with spinal braces & back extension exercises at 3 – 9 weeks.

• Abscesses – aspirate when near surface & instil 1gm Streptomycin +/- INH in solution

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• Sinus heals 6-12 weeks after treatment.

• Neural complications if showing progressive recovery on ATT b/w 3-4 weeks :- surgery unnecessary

• Excisional surgery for posterior spinal disease associated with abscess / sinus formation +/- neural involvement.

• Operative debridement–if no arrest after 3-6 months of ATT / with recurrence of disease .

• Post op spinal brace→18 months-2 years

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All first-line anti-tuberculous drug names have a standard three-letter and a single-letter abbreviation:

• Ethambutol is EMB or E,• isoniazid is INH or H,• Pyrazinamide is PZA or Z,• Rifampicin is RMP or R,• Streptomycin is STM or S.

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Surgical Indications• No sign of neurological recovery after trial of 3-4 weeks therapy

• Neurological complications develop during conservative treatment

• Neuro deficit becoming worse on drugs & bed rest

• Recurrence of neurological complication

• Prevertebral cervical abscess with difficulty in deglutition & respiration

• Advanced cases- Sphincter involvement, flaccid paralysis or severe flexor spasms

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THANKS