Friday, October 29, 2021

Lupine Publishers| Concomitant Cervical Spine Infection with Mycobacterium Tuberculosis and Pyogenic Bacteria Causing Spinal Cord Compression

 Lupine Publishers| Journal of Neurology and Brain Disorders


Case Report

A 57-year-old man presented to the emergency room with neck back pain for about 2 months, unresponsive to nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs and progressive course of upper and lower extremity weakness with no sphincter dysfunction. The patient had no predisposing risk factors such as recent spinal surgery, trauma, instrumentation, distal site of infection, immunosuppression, diabetes. He was apyrexial. Physical examination showed marked mid neck tenderness, no palpable masses were felt, no lymph nodes were felt. Neurological examination of his extremities, spasticity was positive, and power was decreased 3/5 in both lower extremities, 2/5 in both upper extremities. Bilateral Babinski signs were present and deep tendon reflexes were increased.

Full blood count and biochemistry showed white blood cell count (WBC) 10,269/L (neutrophils 71.3%; lymphocytes 21.8%; monocytes 2.2%; WBC 4.4 to 11.3/L); C-reactive protein 13.86 mg/dL (0.1 to 6 mg/dL). Magnetic Resonance imaging of the cervical spine showed the collapsed body of C4 with epidural abscess formation, complicating with spinal cord compression. He underwent urgent anterior cervical decompression and evacuation of anterior epidural abscess with fusion. The material underwent histologic examination and aerobic, anaerobic, fungal, mycobacterial cultures. A tuberculous granuloma was detected on histology. Ziehl-Neelsen stain confirmed the diagnosis. Cultures also detected Staphylococcus aureus. Treatment was started with rifampin (600 mg), Isoniazid (300 mg), ethambutol (25 mg/kg), pyrazinamide (25 mg/kg), and levofloxacin 750 mg for two months. This was followed by seven months of isoniazid and rifampin. The patient was referred to rehabilitation. One year later, the patient is able to walk independently, and the back pain is gone.

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