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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Tuberculosis of the spine: a fresh look at an old disease.

TLDR
The dismal outcome of tuberculosis of the spine in the pre-antibiotic era has improved significantly because of the use of potent antitubercular drugs, modern diagnostic aids and advances in surgical management.
Abstract
The dismal outcome of tuberculosis of the spine in the pre-antibiotic era has improved significantly because of the use of potent antitubercular drugs, modern diagnostic aids and advances in surgical management. MRI allows the diagnosis of a tuberculous lesion, with a sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 88%, well before deformity develops. Neurological deficit and deformity are the worst complications of spinal tuberculosis. Patients treated conservatively show an increase in deformity of about 15°. In children, a kyphosis continues to increase with growth even after the lesion has healed. Tuberculosis of the spine is a medical disease which is not primarily treated surgically, but operation is required to prevent and treat the complications. Panvertebral lesions, therapeutically refractory disease, severe kyphosis, a developing neurological deficit, lack of improvement or deterioration are indications for surgery. Patients who present with a kyphosis of 60° or more, or one which is likely to progress, require anterior decompression, posterior shortening, posterior instrumented stabilisation and anterior and posterior bone grafting in the active stage of the disease. Late-onset paraplegia is best prevented rather than treated. The awareness and suspicion of an atypical presentation of spinal tuberculosis should be high in order to obtain a good outcome. Therapeutically refractory cases of tuberculosis of the spine are increasing in association with the presence of HIV and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Spinal tuberculosis: A review

TL;DR: For example, spinal tuberculosis is a destructive form of tuberculosis that causes the destruction of the intervertebral disk space and the adjacent vertebral bodies, collapse of the spinal elements, and anterior wedging leading to kyphosis and gibbus formation as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bone and joint tuberculosis.

TL;DR: Spinal tuberculosis is still a relative common extra spinal manifestation of spinal tuberculosis that requires a high degree of suspicion in order to avoid neurological complications and need of surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spinal Tuberculosis: Diagnosis and Management

TL;DR: A comprehensive narrative review and analysis of all the papers available for analysis during 1990 to 2011 to extract current trends in diagnosis and medical or surgical treatment of spinal TB is conducted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Radiologic case study

TL;DR: Douleur persistante de la cheville chez un sujet de 36 ans, 6 semaines apres une chute; radiologies standards normales; mise en evidence sur les tomographies et a la R.M.I., d'une fracture osteochondrale du dome du talon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Advances in the diagnosis of tuberculosis.

Christoph Lange, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2010 - 
TL;DR: Novel methods allow for a better identification of latently infected individuals who are at risk of developing active tuberculosis, they also offer the possibility for a rapid diagnosis of active tuberculosis in patients with negative sputum smears and enable prompt identification of drug‐resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis directly from respiratory specimen with a high accuracy.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Tuberculosis of the spine. Controversies and a new challenge.

Myung-Sang Moon
- 01 Aug 1997 - 
TL;DR: It is concluded that spinal tuberculosis without unsightly kyphosis and neurologic symptoms is a medical, rather than a surgical, condition.
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Evaluation of the risk of instrumentation as a foreign body in spinal tuberculosis. Clinical and biologic study.

TL;DR: The results showed that posterior instrumentation surgery was not a hazard to spinal tuberculosis infection when combined with radical debridement and intensive anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy.
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Progression of kyphosis in tuberculosis of the spine treated by anterior arthrodesis.

TL;DR: It is unwise to rely solely on the graft to prevent vertebral collapse in patients in whom the length of the graft exceeds two disc spaces, and these patients may benefit from additional measures, such as an extended period of non-weight-bearing, posterior arthrodesis after six to twelve weeks, and prolonged use of a brace until complete consolidation is evident.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tuberculosis of spine

TL;DR: It is a challenge to treat MDR-TB Spine with late onset paraplegia and progressive deformity and Physicians must treat tuberculosis of spine on the basis of Culture and sensitivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Posterior instrumentation and anterior interbody fusion for tuberculous kyphosis of dorsal and lumbar spines.

TL;DR: Posterior instrumental stabilization and anterior interbody fusion were found helpful in arresting the disease early, providing early fusion, preventing progression of kyphosis, and correcting the kYphosis.
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