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Tuberculous spondylitis: a report of thirty one cases from Santa Marcelina Hospital

INTRODUCTION: the infection of the spine by the mycobacterium tuberculosis is often devastating, requiring early diagnosis and treatment. Objective: to assess the treatment and follow-up regarding the pain, residual kyphosis, image of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and importance of biopsy relating to the clinical treatment. METHODS: retrospective study of 31 patients with diagnosis tuberculous spondylitis making a statistical analysis, studying the data descrition: gender, age, neurological status, spinal segment and kyphosis abscess, presence of residual kyphosis and their clinical correlations, comparing our major cases with literature and relashionship, and if the presence of abscess can influence in on neurological deficit or residual kyphosis. RESULTS: the sample identified an incidence in 23 men and 8 women; cold abscess was identified in 4 patients, and how those with a severe deformity final percutaneous biopsy was performed in 19 patients with positivity in 5, with no influence patient treatment. The pain after treatment showed significant improvement and we used triple drug regimen for one year. CONCLUSIONS: the clinical treatment of tuberculosis should start once the disease is suspected and have compatible images with: vertebral body, decreased disc space height, and elevation of the anterior longitudinal ligament. In the presence of kyphosis using a weighted vest to be hard, being the Boston vest or a plaster cast. The neurological evaluation should be accompanied, and with a short interval, fortnightly during the first three months, because if the clinical treatment is ineffective and the patient has neurological deficit surgical treatment should be considered. The biopsy is a test of high specificity but low sensitivity. When the test is positive it reinforces drug treatment.

Spinal diseases; Biopsy; Tuberculosis, spinal; Magnetic resonance imaging; Pain; kyphosis


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