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The incidence of vertebral osteomyelitis is approximately 1 per 100,000 per year worldwide ; however, this incidence increases with age up to 6.5 per 100,000 among persons older than 70 years of age. Overall, vertebral infections represent 1% of all the skeletal infections. Staphylococcus aureus is the most common pathogen implicated. The primary route of spread is hematogenous, usually from the urinary tract. It primarily affects the vertebral bodies, with only a small percentage of cases affecting the posterior elements. Posterior elements infection is associated with advanced disease. The complete spectrum of pyogenic vertebral osteomyelitis comprises spondylitis, discitis, spondylodiscitis, osteomyelitis, and epidural abscesses. The most common presenting symptom is back pain, which is reported in 86% of the cases. Fever occurs in less than 50% of patients at presentation. The most common spinal segments affected are the lumbar vertebrae, followed by the thoracic and cervical spine. Most cases resolve with prolonged medical therapy (i.e., antibiotics); however, surgical intervention may be employed for patients who have progressive neurological deficits, failure of adequate conservative treatment, or intractable radicular pain from epidural extension of the infection. Delayed surgical treatment may be associated with higher rates of sepsis and impaired neurological status. Spinal instrumentation may or may not be used and depends on the stability of the affected spinal segments or the presence of deformity. Currently, there is a gap in the literature describing high levels of evidence for surgical versus nonsurgical intervention. Thus surgical indications and modalities are still controversial. Herein, we describe the case of a 60-year-old immunosuppressed woman who presented with nonspecific back pain and left dorsiflexion weakness and imaging concerning for lumbar osteomyelitis.
Chief complaint: back pain, weakness
History of present illness: A 60-year-old female patient with progressive back pain and left dorsiflexion weakness. She is immunosuppressed from a previous renal transplant and has no other constitutional symptoms. She also reports left greater than right leg pain when ambulating. The patient underwent a magnetic resonance ( Fig. 62.1 ) and a computed tomography of the lumbar spine ( Fig. 62.2 ) that showed the presence of vertebral osteomyelitis associated with discitis and ventral epidural collection.
Medications: immunosuppressants
Allergies: no known drug allergies
Past medical and surgical history: renal failure, immunosuppression, renal transplantation
Family history: none
Social history: none
Physical examination: awake, alert, and oriented to person, place, and time; cranial nerves II–XII intact; bilateral deltoids/triceps/biceps 5/5; interossei 5/5; iliopsoas/knee flexion/knee extension/plantar flexion 5/5; left dorsiflexion 4/5.
Reflexes: 2+ in bilateral biceps/triceps/brachioradialis with negative Hoffman; 2+ in bilateral patella/ankle; no clonus or Babinski; sensation intact to light touch
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Preoperative | ||||
Additional tests requested |
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Standing flexion-extension lumbar x-rays |
Surgical approach selected | If infection persistent after treatment and/or worsening symptoms, MIS L5-S1 TLIF and posterior percutaneous L4-5 fusion | Lumbar wound incision and drainage and biopsy of L5-S1 disc space | After antibiotics, L2-iliac posterior fusion | L4-S1 (possible S2) decompression and fusion |
Goal of surgery | Decompression, stabilization, debridement of infection | Drainage and washing, bacterial cultures, biopsy | Stabilization | Sample infection, debride L5-S1 level, stabilization |
Perioperative | ||||
Positioning | Prone | Prone | Prone | Prone on Jackson table |
Surgical equipment |
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Fluoroscopy |
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Medications | Liposomal bupivacaine | Hold antibiotics until sampling | None | Hold antibiotics until sampling |
Anatomical considerations | Thecal sac, pedicles, disc space | Thecal sac, nerve root, intervertebral disc | Pedicles, transverse processes, facets | L5 nerve roots |
Complications feared with approach chosen | Wound issues | Wound complication, progressive infection | Reinfection, CSF leak | Wound complication |
Intraoperative | ||||
Anesthesia | General | General | General | General |
Exposure | L4-5 | L5-sacrum | L2-sacrum | L4-S1 |
Levels decompressed | L4-5 | L5 | None | L4-S1 |
Levels fused | L4-5 | None | L2-iliac | L4-S1 |
Surgical narrative | Position prone, place reference array on iliac crest, O-arm spin and navigation acquisition, bilateral paramedian incisions, place percutaneous MIS pedicle screws at L5-S1, dock MIS tubular retractor over L5-S1 facet joint for TLIF, facetectomy under microscope, TLIF and cage placement, swab disc space, irrigate with antibiotics, place vancomycin powder, place auto and allograft, place rods, standard closure | Position prone, midline incision L5-sacrum, dissect in surgical layers until reaching space between L5 lamina and sacrum, cut yellow ligament, protect thecal sac and nerve roots, take cultures, biopsy disc space, wash with antiseptic solution, place Garacoll if available, layered closure | Position prone, linear incision from L2-sacrum, dissection of paravertebral muscles, identify facets and transverse processes, locate pedicle insertion sites, placement of pedicle screws with fluoroscopic verification, verify pedicle integrity, insert screws from L2 to S1, locate iliac bone, wedge excision on iliac bone after dissection of iliac, iliac tunneling, iliac screw placement, layered closure with drain | Position prone on Jackson table, localizing x-ray, midline incision, insert pedicle screws L4-S1 using navigation, L5-S1 laminectomy with discectomy, send samples from disc space, irrigate with 3 L of vancomycin and gentamycin, insert rods, perform fusion with allograft from L4 to S1, close with subfascial drain, PICC line for antibiotics |
Complication avoidance | MIS, percutaneous pedicle screws, indirect decompression of nerve roots | Aim for disc space, protect neural structures when biopsy disc, place Garacoll if possible | Anatomical placement of pedicle screws | Hold antibiotics until samples obtained, surgical navigation |
Postoperative | ||||
Admission | Floor | Floor | ICU | Floor |
Postoperative complications feared | Persistent infection | Progress infection, neurological injury | Reinfection, neurological injury, CSF leak | Failure of fusion, wound breakdown |
Anticipated length of stay | 3–4 days | 7 days | 3 days | 4–5 days |
Follow-up testing |
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CBC/ESR/CRP 48 hours after surgery |
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Bracing | None | None | None | None |
Follow-up visits | 4 weeks, 3 months, 6 months after surgery | 1 week after surgery | 10 days, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months after surgery | 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year after surgery |
Vertebral osteomyelitis/discitis
Malignancy
Retroperitoneal infection
Spondylosis
Vertebral body and pars interarticularis fracture
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