Medical management of Pott disease in the thoracic and lumbar spine: a prospective clinical study
Autor: | Kadir Kotil, M. Servet Alan, Turgay Bilge |
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Rok vydání: | 2007 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Antitubercular Agents Physical examination Pott disease Thoracic Vertebrae Lumbar Spinal cord compression medicine Humans Prospective Studies Child Aged Lumbar Vertebrae medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry General Medicine Middle Aged Prognosis medicine.disease Magnetic Resonance Imaging Surgery Treatment Outcome Radiological weapon Population study Drug Therapy Combination Female Lumbar spine Tuberculosis Spinal Presentation (obstetrics) business |
Zdroj: | Journal of Neurosurgery: Spine. 6:222-228 |
ISSN: | 1547-5654 |
DOI: | 10.3171/spi.2007.6.3.222 |
Popis: | ObjectThe aim of this study was to evaluate conservative medical management of 44 patients with Pott disease. The prognostic significance of various clinical, radiological, and long-term follow-up findings in these patients was also evaluated.MethodsBetween January 1990 and January 2005 data were collected prospectively at the authors' clinic in 44 patients with Pott disease in the thoracic or lumbar spine. These patients had no major neurological deficits or severe spinal deformities. The study population consisted of 21 male (48%) and 23 female (52%) patients, with a mean age of 42.1 years (range 10–70 years). The most common region of Pott disease was the thoracolumbar junction (18 cases; 41%), followed by the thoracic (16 cases; 36%) and lumbar (10 cases; 23%) regions. All patients presented with abscesses. With the exception of two cases, all had kyphotic angles smaller than 30°. At presentation, 20 patients had neurological signs of spinal cord compression during clinical examination. Both clinical and biopsy findings were used in all cases for diagnosis. A diagnosis was confirmed by a positive biopsy specimen culture in 19 (43.2%) of 44 cases, and histopathological findings were compatible with the results of these cultures in all cases. All patients were treated with antituberculous chemotherapy, and the diseases in only two (4.5%) was resistant to the regimen. An independent observer assessed the clinical and imaging findings after a mean follow-up duration of 40 months.Forty-two (95.4%) of the 44 patients were successfully treated with conservative medical management and attained acceptable spinal deformity angles, and none of these patients had any residual instability, radiculopathy, or neurological compromise. Only 4.5% of the patients experienced residual spine deformity (as much as a 30° kyphotic angle), which was clinically obvious but biomechanically stable.ConclusionsPatients with Pott disease in the lumbar or thoracic region, without neurological deficits or kyphosis, can be treated conservatively in the vast majority of cases. Indications for surgery need to be redefined given these new data. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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