Cervical brucellar spondylitis with spinal epidural abscess: Two in one involving cervical spine
Titel:
Cervical brucellar spondylitis with spinal epidural abscess: Two in one involving cervical spine
Auteur:
İncel, Nurgül Arıncı As, İsmet Şahin, Günşah
Verschenen in:
Journal of back and musculoskeletal rehabilitation
Paginering:
Jaargang 21 (2009) nr. 4 pagina's 273-277
Jaar:
2009-01-06
Inhoud:
Brucellosis is a systemic infectious disease presenting with possible osteoarticular involvement like sacroiliitis, peripheral arthritis, osteomyelitis, bursitis and spondylitis. Here we report a case of brucellar spondylitis involving cervical vertebrae complicated by epidural abscess without neurologic impairment. A 64 year-old woman with neck pain radiating to the left arm presented with coexisting low-grade fever, night sweats, chills, dorsal pain, arthralgia and fatigue. Musculoskeletal examination revealed tenderness over the cervical spinal processes and bilateral paraspinal muscles. Brucellosis was suspected due to unpasteurised fresh cheese consumption and was confirmed with agglutination tests. X-rays showed increased anterior soft tissue thickness at the C4-7 level and a loss of height of the C6-C7 disc. MRI with gadolinium showed an epidural abscess lesion and diffuse hypointense signal intensity at C6-C7 vertebral end plates without any bony destruction. After 3 months with a combination of streptomycin, rifampicin and doxycycline treatment, all symptoms and signs disappeared, and MR imaging revealed evident narrowing of C6-C7 intervertebral disc space as a sequalae of spondylitis. During the follow up of 2 years, no relapse occurred. Since there is no specific symptom or sign of brucellosis, it should be suspected during the course of diagnosis, based on a patient's history, symptoms, radiological findings in regions where brucellosis is endemic.