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In the interval between 1983 and 1988, 14 patients were treated for pyogenic spondylitis complicated by neurologic compromise. There were nine males and five females aged 39-80 years. The average time between onset of symptoms and diagnosis was 2.8 months. Predisposing factors were diabetes mellitus in four patients and urinary tract infections in five patients. The infection was blood borne in all 14 patients. In two patients, the infection was superimposed on a recent vertebral fracture. The cervical spine was involved in one patient; the thoracic spine in seven; and the lumbar spine in six patients. Six patients presented with a Frankel B paralysis, six with a Frankel C paralysis, and two with grade D paralysis. The neurologic symptoms lasted between one day and six weeks before surgery. Twelve patients had anterolateral decompression. Two of the 12 patients had a second stage posterior stabilization. Two patients were deemed inoperable. All surviving patients were managed by parenteral antibiotics for three to six weeks followed by enteral route for a total of three to six months. All 12 operated patients had a significant neurologic improvement (one grade or more on the Frankel scale) with solid interbody fusion.
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PMID:Pyogenic vertebral osteomyelitis with paralysis. Prognosis and treatment. 186 31

A 67-year-old woman with pneumonia and diabetes mellitus was admitted with the complaints of abdominal and back pain. Sputum culture was positive for Klebsiella pneumoniae. Computed tomographic scanning (CT) of the abdomen and spinal radiograph of the lumber column revealed a paraventebral space-occupying lesion, abdominal aortic aneurysm and destructive change of L3 and L4. Pseudoaneurysm of the abdominal aorta associated with infectious spondylitis with paravertebral abscess was suspected and confirmed by aortography. Klebsiella pneumoniae was cultured from the abscess. The patient's condition improved rapidly after drainage of the abscess and administration of LMOX and gentamicin. Infectious pseudoaneurysm of the abdominal aorta associated with infectious spondylitis has rarely been reported. These two in combination due to Klebsiella pneumoniae has not been reported to our knowledge. The pathologic changes were found easily by CT scan. When infectious aneurysm or infectious spondylitis is diagnosed alone, possible combination of these diseases should be kept in mind.
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PMID:A case of infectious pseudoaneurysm of the abdominal aorta associated with infectious spondylitis due to Klebsiella pneumoniae. 266 92

Pyogenic osteomyelitis of the spine is an uncommon disease. A series of 16 cases is reported. The site of involvement includes the lumbar, cervical, and thoracic segments, in that order of frequency of occurrence. Drug addiction and diabetes mellitus are important predisposing factors. The spectrum of clinical presentation is described. Late presentation is usually masked by old age, debilitation, and previous antibiotic treatment. Rapid progression with septicemia is also encountered. The importance of differentiating this condition from tuberculosis spondylitis is emphasized. Definitive diagnosis should depend on bacteriological, histological, and, with the recent introduction of antituberculosis antibody test, serological studies. Timely surgical intervention is indicated in complicated cases. Radical excision and anterior spinal fusion yields early and complete eradication of the infected material plus arthrodesis, which prevents late collapse of the spine.
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PMID:Pyogenic osteomyelitis of the spine--a review of 16 consecutive cases. 298 Jan 42

Two previously healthy adults, a man aged 69 and a woman aged 51 years, presented with spondylitis caused by Streptococcus agalactiae. One patient had fever and acute pain in the neck, the other progressive pain in the lower back. From cultures of blood and bone respectively. S. agalactiae was isolated. Both patients recovered after treatment with benzylpenicillin. S. agalactiae (group B streptococcus) is a wellknown cause of invasive infections in neonates and pregnant adults. Infections in nonpregnant adults are increasingly reported. Chronic conditions such as diabetes mellitus are strongly associated with disease caused by S. agalactiae.
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PMID:[Spondylodiscitis caused by Streptococcus agalactiae]. 919 May 11

Pyogenic infectious spondylitis (PIS) is an uncommon but serious inflammatory disorder of the discovertebral junction with frequent involvement of neural structures including the spinal cord. We report a series of 41 patients (age range 21-75 years, mean age 59 years) with primary PIS confirmed by signal abnormality of the intervertebral disk and adjacent vertebral bodies on magnetic resonance imaging. The prevailing clinical symptom was focal back pain aggravated by percussion in 90% of patients. Radicular signs or symptoms were present in 59% and spinal cord symptoms in 29% of patients, respectively. Evidence of inflammation consisted of an elevated sedimentation rate in 76%, leukocytosis in 61% and fever in 61% of individuals. Predisposing factors such as diabetes mellitus, previous nonspinal surgery and other sites of infection or inflammation were identified in 17 (41%) patients and 30 (73%) were older than 50 years. The lumbar spine was most often affected and PIS was associated with an epidural abscess in 15 (37%) patients. Increased alertness for PIS in the context of focal back pain with clinical or laboratory signs of inflammation is needed to speed up its detection.
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PMID:Pyogenic infectious spondylitis: clinical, laboratory and MRI features. 928 31

Streptococcus agalactiae is a well-recognized cause of neonatal sepsis and meningitis. In adults, infections by S. agalactiae are rare. We report an adult case of lung abscess and pyogenic spondylitis caused by S. agalactiae. A 51-year-old male was admitted to our hospital because of an abnormal shadow in the chest and lumbago on May 25, 1995. He was diagnosed as lung abscess from the chest roentgenogram and CT scan and the subcutaneous pus was aspirated. The pus culture was only positive for S. agalactiae. He was treated with IPM/CS 1 g/day and CLDM 1.2 g/day and the abscess was drained. MRI showed his lumbago was caused by pyogenic spondylitis. The underlying disease of this case was diabetes mellitus. He recovered from the infections with in about 10 weeks of antibiotic treatment.
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PMID:[Case report: lung abscess caused by Streptococcus agalactiae]. 939 64

A case of pyogenic infectious spondylitis associated with diabetes was reported. The patient experienced focal back pain 2 weeks after amputation of her left foot due to diabetic gangrene. Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbar spine revealed decreased T1-weighted signals of Th11 and Th12 vertebral bodies and prevertebral masses, and these lesions were also detected as high signal intensities in T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. The images were consistent with a diagnosis of pyogenic infectious spondylitis and the patient responded to treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics. Percutaneous drainage of the abscesses was also needed. Early magnetic resonance imaging examination was particularly helpful in the accurate diagnosis and treatment of this rare disorder.
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PMID:Pyogenic infectious spondylitis in a patient with diabetes: case report. 1041 61

A 56-year-old female, who had been suffering from heart failure and diabetes mellitus, underwent posterior instrumentation in the prone position and anterior interbody fusion in the right lateral decubitus position for pyogenic spondylitis between the fourth and fifth lumbar spine under general and epidural anesthesia. We induced hypotensive anesthesia by using continuous infusion of dopamine, prostaglandin E1 and nitroglycerin in order to prevent heart failure and reduce the blood loss. After the operation, the patient complained of upper abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting. We found high levels of serum amylase and other pancreatic enzymes. The massive gas of small intestine was pooled in abdominal X-P, and the pancreatic head was slightly swollen in abdominal CT and US. Therefore we came to the diagnosis of postoperative acute pancreatitis. We administered a single bolus intravenous infusion of ulinastatine and continuous venous infusion of gabexate mesilate. As the serum amylase level gradually decreased, the patient improved. We suspect that postoperative pancreatitis was due to invasive anesthetic and surgical stress on the patient who had had pancreatitis in the preoperative period.
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PMID:[A case of acute pancreatitis that occurred after an operation of the lumbar spine]. 1088 49

Streptococcus agalactiae is a rare cause of vertebral osteomyelitis. We present four cases of spondylitis caused by this micro-organism and a review of 20 cases previously described in the literature. Only seven patients (29%) were under 50 years of age. Diabetes mellitus and neoplasms were the most frequent underlying conditions, although 37.5% of the patients did not have any predisposition. Neck or back pain was the most common symptom. Diagnosis depended mainly on magnetic resonance imaging. Blood cultures were positive in 50% of the patients. The duration of antibiotic therapy was 6 weeks for most patients. The outcome was favourable, with none of the patients suffering serious sequelae.
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PMID:Vertebral osteomyelitis caused by Streptococcus agalactiae. 1094 45

We report the case of a 44-year-old obese diabetic woman admitted for fever. Blood cultures grew Staphylococcus Aureus and antibiotherapy was started. Iliac abscess was diagnosed and surgical drainage done. Clinical evolution was marked by metastatic dissemination: sacroiliac osteolysis, right shoulder osteoarthritis, spondylitis of the third lumbar vertebra and pulmonary localizations. This case-report shows diagnosis and treatment difficulties of an iliac muscle abscess with metastatic localization in a diabetic patient.
Diabetes Metab 2002 Sep
PMID:Iliac muscle abcess and staphylococcal metastatic infection in a diabetic patient. 1244 71


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