Spinal Infections

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Spinal Infections - Sneaky Spine Invaders

Sagittal MRI: Spinal infection, vertebral destruction

  • Inflammation of spinal elements (vertebral osteomyelitis, discitis, epidural abscess) due to microbial invasion.
  • Types & Pathogens:
    • Pyogenic (Bacterial):
      • Staphylococcus aureus (most common overall).
      • Gram-negative bacilli (e.g., E. coli in UTI).
    • Granulomatous:
      • Tuberculous (Pott's Disease): Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Often insidious.
      • Fungal (e.g., Aspergillus, Candida): Immunocompromised hosts.
      • Brucellosis.
  • Spread:
    • Direct inoculation (surgery, trauma).
    • Contiguous (local spread).

⭐ Most common route of infection is hematogenous spread, often from distant foci (skin, UTI, respiratory).

Pyogenic Spondylodiscitis - Fiery Disc Drama

Staphylococcus aureus is the most common causative organism worldwide.

MRI of pyogenic spondylodiscitis

  • Etiology:
    • Route: Hematogenous (most common).
    • Organism: S. aureus (predominant); Gram-negatives (e.g., E. coli).
  • Clinical Features:
    • Back pain: Severe, localized, worse with movement/night.
    • Systemic: Fever, malaise.
    • Neurology: Possible deficits (cord compression, radiculopathy).
  • Diagnosis:
    • Labs: ↑ ESR, ↑ CRP; Blood cultures (~50% positive).
    • Imaging:
      • MRI + Gadolinium: Gold standard. Early detection. Shows disc/vertebral inflammation, abscess.
      • X-ray: Late findings (>2-4 weeks); disc space narrowing, endplate erosion.
    • Biopsy: CT-guided for microbiology & histology (crucial if blood cultures negative).
  • Management:
    • Antibiotics: IV for 6-8 weeks, then oral. Tailor to culture.
    • Immobilization: Spinal brace.
    • Surgery: For neurological deficits, spinal instability, sepsis, failed conservative Rx, large abscess.

Pott's Spine - Tubercular Trouble

Paradiscal involvement with anterior vertebral body destruction and potential cold abscess formation is the hallmark of tuberculous spondylitis.

  • Etiology: Mycobacterium tuberculosis, hematogenous spread.

  • Common Site: Thoracic spine (D8-L3); anterior vertebral body, paradiscal.

  • Clinical Triad: Insidious back pain, constitutional symptoms (fever, night sweats, weight loss), spinal deformity (kyphosis/gibbus).

    • Cold abscess (e.g., psoas, paravertebral).
    • Neurological deficit: Pott's paraplegia.
  • Investigations:

    • X-ray: Vertebral body destruction (anterior wedging), ↓ disc space, calcified paravertebral shadow (fusiform/bird-nest).
    • MRI: Gold standard for soft tissue extent, cord compression, abscess.
    • Biopsy/GeneXpert: Confirmatory (AFB stain, culture, NAAT).
  • Management:

    • Anti-tubercular therapy (ATT): Standard regimen 2HRZE + 10HRE (total 12-18 months). 📌 RIPE for initial phase (Rifampicin, Isoniazid, Pyrazinamide, Ethambutol).
    • Rest, bracing (for pain relief & stability).
  • Surgical Indications:

    • Neurological deficit (progressive or no improvement after 3-4 weeks ATT).
    • Spinal instability.
    • Large abscess requiring drainage.
    • Significant/progressive kyphosis (>40°).
    • No response to ATT / diagnostic doubt.

Spinal Epidural Abscess - Cord Under Pressure

  • Patho: Pus in epidural space → cord/nerve root compression.
  • Etiology: Staphylococcus aureus (MC); hematogenous (IVDU, skin), direct (vertebral osteomyelitis).
  • Risk Factors: DM, IVDU, immunosuppression, spinal procedures, CKD.
  • Clinical Triad (often incomplete/late): Fever, severe back pain, progressive neuro deficits (radiculopathy → weakness → sensory loss → sphincter issues).
  • Diagnosis: MRI + Gad (gold standard). ↑ESR, ↑CRP, leukocytosis. Blood cultures.
  • Management: Neurosurgical emergency!
    • Urgent surgical decompression (laminectomy, drainage) for neuro deficits.
    • IV antibiotics (Vancomycin + Cephalosporin) for 6-8 weeks, culture-guided.

⭐ Progressive neurological deficits in Spinal Epidural Abscess are a neurosurgical emergency requiring prompt decompression.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Staphylococcus aureus is the most common pathogen in pyogenic spinal infections.
  • Pott's spine (TB): Thoracolumbar junction is the classic site; look for cold abscess and gibbus deformity.
  • MRI is the imaging modality of choice for early diagnosis and assessing the extent of infection.
  • ESR and CRP are crucial inflammatory markers for diagnosis and monitoring treatment response.
  • Spinal epidural abscess: A neurosurgical emergency; urgent surgical decompression is vital if neurological deficits are present.
  • Brucellar spondylitis: Characterized by undulant fever, sacroiliitis, and Pedro Pons' sign (anterosuperior vertebral body erosion).
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Practice Questions: Spinal Infections

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Osteomyelitis of spine is caused by the most common organism?

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Spinal injuries is classified under _____ colour on traiging

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Spinal injuries is classified under _____ colour on traiging

yellow

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