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Spinal Epidural Abscess SEA

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Title: Spinal Epidural Abscess SEA


1
Spinal Epidural Abscess SEA
www.medkaau.com/vb
  • Done by
  • Dr.Walaa Gholam
  • KAAU 2007
  • 4th year medical student

2
contents
  • - Pathogenesis
  • - Causative agents
  • - Mechanism of injury
  • - Clinical features (symptoms. Physical exam)
  • - Investigation (lab. Imaging)
  • - DD
  • - Diagnosis
  • - Treatment (surgical , medical)
  • - Prognosis
  • - complications

EBM
3
Pathogenesis 1,2,3
  • - Underlying disease
  • diabetes mellitus
  • alcoholism
  • infection with HIV
  • - A spinal abnormality or intervention
  • degenerative joint
    disease
  • Trauma
  • Surgery
  • drug injection
  • placement of stimulators
    or catheters

4
  • - a potential local or systemic source of
    infection
  • Skin and soft-tissue
    infections
  • Osteomyelitis
  • Pott's disease (spinal
    TB)
  • UTI, URTI
  • Sepsis
  • Dermal sinus tract ,
    Dental abscess
  • Retropharyngeal abscess
  • Lemierres syndrome (1
    case report) !! 4
  • Indwelling vascular
    access, Intravenous drug use
  • Nerve acupuncture,
    Tattooing
  • Epidural analgesia (in
    cancer pt) or nerve block
  • hemodialysis patients
    (12 case report) 5

5
(No Transcript)
6
Causative agents
  • S. aureus 2/3 of cases.1,4.
  • (MRSA) 15 decade ago 2 (escalated rapidly up
    to 40) after spinal injection or surgery
  • S. epidermidis (placement of catheters, surgery)
  • Escherichia coli (subsequent to UTI)
  • Pseudomonas aeruginosa (injection-drug users) 4
  • Rarely anaerobic bacteria 3
  • agents of actinomycosis or
    nocardiosis, mycobacteria 4
  • fungi (including candida, sporothrix,
    and aspergillus species) 4
  • parasites (echinococcus and
    dracunculus)
  • 1- Reihsaus E, Waldbaur H, Seeling W. Spinal
    epidural abscess a meta-analysis of 915
    patients. Neurosurg Rev 2000
  • 2- Rigamonti D, Liem L, Sampath P, et al. Spinal
    epidural abscess contemporary trends in
    etiology, evaluation, and management. Surg Neurol
    1999
  • 3- Lechiche C, Le Moing V, Marchandin H,
    Chanques G, Atoui N, Reynes J. Spondylodiscitis
    due to Bacteroides fragilis two cases and
    review. Scand J Infect Dis 2006
  • 4- Reihsaus E, Waldbaur H, Seeling W. Spinal
    epidural abscess a meta-analysis of 915
    patients. Neurosurg Rev 2000

7
Bacteria gain access to the epidural space
through
  • - Contiguous spread 1/3 of patients
  • - Hematogenous dissemination 1/3 of patients
  • - The source of infection is not identified 1/3
    of patients

infection that originates in the spinal epidural
space can extend locally or through the
bloodstream to other sites
8
Mechanism of injury(principal mechanism is
uncertain)
  • - Directly by mechanical compression
  • (remarkable degree of neurologic improvement in
    some patients after decompressive laminectomy)
  • - Indirectly as a result of vascular occlusion
    caused by septic thrombophlebitis
  • (thrombosed levels are observed in few postmortem
    examinations) 1
  • (infarction of the spinal cord, as reflected by
    altered cord signal MRI) result from both
  • 1- Browder J, Meyers R. Pyogenic infections of
    the spinal epidural space a consideration of the
    anatomic and physiologic pathology. Surgery 1941

9
  • - abscesses are more likely to develop in larger
    epidural spaces that contain infection-prone fat,
    they are more common in posterior than anterior
    areas and in thoracolumbar than cervical areas 1
  • - use of spinal interventions for pain management
    led to a disproportionate increase in the
    occurrence of lumbar epidural infection 2
  • - generally extend over 3 to 4 vertebrae 1,3
  • 1- Danner RL, Hartman BJ. Update of spinal
    epidural abscess 35 cases and review of the
    literature. Rev Infect Dis 1987
  • 2- Khan SH, Hussain MS, Griebel RW, Hattingh S.
    Comparison of primary and secondary spinal
    epidural abscesses a retrospective analysis of
    29 cases. Surg Neurol 2003
  • 3- Tang H-J, Lin H-J, Liu Y-C, Li C-M. Spinal
    epidural abscess -- experience with 46 patients
    and evaluation of prognostic factors. J Infect
    2002

10
Paraspinal Infection
  • In rare cases they involve the whole spine,
    resulting in so-called panspinal infection 1,2
  • 1- Rigamonti D, Liem L, Sampath P, et al. Spinal
    epidural abscess contemporary trends in
    etiology, evaluation, and management. Surg Neurol
    1999
  • 2- Solomou E, Maragkos M, Kotsarini C,
    Konstantinou D, Maraziotis T. Multiple spinal
    epidural abscesses extending to the whole spinal
    canal. Magn Reson Imaging 2004

11
Clinical features
  • stage 1, back pain at the level of the affected
    spine
  • stage 2, nerve-root pain radiating from the
    involved spinal area
  • stage 3, motor weakness, sensory deficit, and
    bladder and bowel dysfunction
  • stage 4, paralysis
  • Back pain in 3/4 of pt
  • Fever in 1/2 pt
  • Neurologic deficit in 1/3 pt
  • are the three most common symptoms but in
    minority of pts 1
  • 1- Reihsaus E, Waldbaur H, Seeling W. Spinal
    epidural abscess a meta-analysis of 915
    patients. Neurosurg Rev 2000

12
Physical exam
  • - vary with the degree of spinal cord compression
  • - Localized tenderness to palpation at the site
    of the abscess
  • - Paraspinal muscle spasm may be present
  • - Signs of spinal cord dysfunction
  • - Complete transverse spinal cord syndrome
    (paraplegia and sphincter dysfunction)
  • - Incomplete spinal cord syndromes
  • - Reflexes vary from absent to hyperreflexia with
    clonus and Babinski responses. (Areflexia may
    indicate spinal shock with transient inhibition
    of spinal reflexes)
  • - Nuchal rigidity may be present, particularly
    with cervical epidural abscesses

13
DDx
Other problems
  • - Alcohol Related Neuropathy
  • - Cervical Spondylosis
  • - Epidural Hematoma
  • - HIV-1 Associated Vacuolar Myelopathy
  • - Leptomeningeal Carcinomatosis
  • - Metastatic Disease to the Spine
  • - Multiple Sclerosis
  • - Spinal Cord Hemorrhage
  • - Spinal Cord Infarction
  • - Subdural Empyema
  • - Subdural Hematoma
  • - Tropical Myeloneuropathies
  • - Vitamin B-12 Associated Neurological Diseases
  • Cervical disk syndromes
  • Lumbosacral disk syndromes
  • Lumbosacral spondylosis
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Intravenous drug use
  • Psoas abscess
  • Retropharyngeal abscess
  • Transverse myelitis
  • Urinary tract infection
  • Vertebral osteomyelitis
  • Back pain

14
Diagnosis
  • suspected on the basis of clinical findings
  • supported by laboratory data and imaging studies
  • but can be confirmed only by drainage
  • Although leukocytosis detected in
    about 2/3 of pt 1,2 and inflammatory markers
    (ESR and C-reactive protein) are almost uniformly
    elevated, they are not specific
  • Bacteremia causing or arising from
    spinal epidural abscess is detected in about 60
    of patients 3
  • 1- Darouiche RO, Hamill RJ, Greenberg SB,
    Weathers SW, Musher DM. Bacterial spinal epidural
    abscess review of 43 cases and literature
    survey. Medicine (Baltimore) 1992
  • 2- Soehle M, Wallenfang T. Spinal epidural
    abscesses clinical manifestations, prognostic
    factors, and outcomes. Neurosurgery 2002
  • 3- Curry WT Jr, Hoh BL, Amin-Hanjani S, Eskandar
    EN. Spinal epidural abscess clinical
    presentation, management, and outcome. Surg
    Neurol 2005

15
DiagnosisCSF
  • CSF analysis shows a high level of protein
    and pleocytosis (with either a polymorphonuclear
    or a mononuclear predominance) ? parameningeal
    inflammation, but are not specific for epidural
    infection 1
  • Gram staining of CSF is usually ve
  • CSF cultures are ve in less than 25 of pt.
  • However, blood cultures yield the
    infecting pathogen in almost all patients with a
    positive CSF culture 1
  • 1- Darouiche RO, Hamill RJ, Greenberg SB,
    Weathers SW, Musher DM. Bacterial spinal epidural
    abscess review of 43 cases and literature
    survey. Medicine (Baltimore) 1992

16
But !!
  • although rare, there is a risk of meningitis or
    subdural infection if the needle traverses the
    epidural abscess
  • Because lumbar puncture affords meager
    information and is associated with a slight
    potential risk
  • it should not be done routinely
  • CSF should be analyzed only if myelography is
    performed.

17
Radiology
  • Both MRI with intravenous administration of
    gadolinium and myelography followed by CT of the
    spine are highly sensitive (more than 90) in
    diagnosing spinal epidural abscess 1, 2
  • MRI better
  • longitudinal and paraspinal extension
  • abscess or cancer !! 3
  • 1- Rigamonti D, Liem L, Sampath P, et al. Spinal
    epidural abscess contemporary trends in
    etiology, evaluation, and management. Surg Neurol
    1999
  • 2- Hlavin ML, Kaminski HJ, Ross JS, Ganz E.
    Spinal epidural abscess a ten-year perspective.
    Neurosurgery 1990
  • 3- Parkinson JF, Sekhon LH. Spinal epidural
    abscess appearance on magnetic resonance imaging
    as a guide to surgical management. Neurosurg
    Focus 2004

18
Radiology
  • - plain roentgenograph or CT narrowing of the
    disk and bone lysis to indicate the presence of
    diskitis and osteomyelitis (which coexist with
    SEA in up to 80 of patients) 1
  • - radionuclide scanning (with technetium,
    gallium, or indium) may show increased uptake
  • (the findings of these tests are neither
    sensitive nor specific for SEA and should not
    take the place of MRI)
  • - The presence of pulmonary infiltrates on the
    chest radiography, is evidence of
    immunodeficiency
  • 1- Khan SH, Hussain MS, Griebel RW, Hattingh S.
    Comparison of primary and secondary spinal
    epidural abscesses a retrospective analysis of
    29 cases. Surg Neurol 2003

19
Diagnosis cont.
  • - direct smear or culture sputum positive for
    acid-fast bacilli, is suggestive of TB.

20
narrowing of the L3L4 disk space (arrow) on a
plain roentgenograph of the lumbar spine of a
patient who presented with back pain and MRSA
bacteremia of unknown origin
21
additional findings of bone erosion of the lower
part of L3 and, to a lesser extent, the upper
part of L4 vertebral bodies (arrows) are apparent
on CT of the spine
22
a bone scan shows increased uptake of technetium
in the lower spine (arrow)
23
Diagnosis in this patient was finally made with
MRI, which shows an anterior SEA at L4 (arrow)
associated with osteomyelitis of L3 and L4 and
L3L4 diskitis
24
Diagnosis cont.
  • - Rare condition
  • - Non specific finding (fever, back pain,
    leukocytosis, ? ESR, ? C-reactive protien ?
    misdiagnosed
  • particularly in neurologically intact patients
    (those in stage 1 or stage 2) 1.2
  • Other diagnosis !!
  • infectious conditions (osteomyelitis,
    diskitis, meningitis, UTI, sepsis, and
    endocarditis)
  • noninfectious conditions
    (intervertebral-disk prolapse, degenerative joint
    disease, spinal tumor, demyelinating illness,
    transverse myelitis, and spinal hematoma)
  • 1- Davis DP, Wold RM, Patel RJ, et al. The
    clinical presentation and impact of diagnostic
    delays on emergency department patients with
    spinal epidural abscess. J Emerg Med 2004
  • 2- Tang H-J, Lin H-J, Liu Y-C, Li C-M. Spinal
    epidural abscess -- experience with 46 patients
    and evaluation of prognostic factors. J Infect
    2002

25
Treatment
  • Surgical
  • Medical

26
Treatment
  • - prospective, randomized clinical trials to
    determine the optimal treatment (DIFFECULT)
  • - But
  • majority of retrospective studies provide support
    for
  • surgical drainage together with systemic
    antibiotics is the treatment of choice 1, 2, 3
  • - decompressive laminectomy and débridement of
    infected tissues should be done ASAP 1
  • 1- Lu C-H, Chang W-N, Lui C-C, Lee P-Y, Chang HW.
    Adult spinal epidural abscess clinical features
    and prognostic factors. Clin Neurol Neurosurg
    2002
  • 2- Curry WT Jr, Hoh BL, Amin-Hanjani S, Eskandar
    EN. Spinal epidural abscess clinical
    presentation, management, and outcome. Surg
    Neurol 2005
  • 3- Pereira CE, Lynch JC. Spinal epidural abscess
    an analysis of 24 cases. Surg Neurol 2005

27
NEJM
28
- spinal instability and deformity- post
laminectomy syndrome
29
  • Because it is impractical to perform
    decompressive laminectomy in patients with
    panspinal epidural abscess,
  • consider less extensive surgery, such as a
    limited laminectomy or laminotomy with cranial
    and caudal insertion of epidural catheters for
    drainage and irrigation

30
MRI shows a posterior collection of epidural
fluid (arrow at C7) that extends from C1 to T8
and displaces the ventrally located thecal sac
(arrowhead at C7) in a patient in whom
quadriplegia developed as a result of infection
with MSSA
31
MRI of the remaining spinal column from T8 to the
lumbosacral region demonstrates the caudal
extension of the same posterior spinal epidural
abscess (arrow at T11) and anterior displacement
of the spinal cord (arrowhead at T11).
32
Postoprative care
  • Postsurgical patients require monitoring of
    neurologic status
  • Sequential compression devices (SCD), which
    decrease venous stasis in the legs (DVT)
  • - If the patient has a deficit from spinal cord
    damage, nursing attention for skin care, catheter
    care, and physical therapy may be necessary
  • - Outpatient
  • Rehabilitation.
  • Restrengthening programs and ambulation
    retraining.
  • Home health care ongoing antibiotic and physical
    therapy.

33
Antibiotics
  • At least 6 weeks because vertebral osteomyelitis
    exists in most patients

34
  • S aureus is a common pathogen
  • (antistaphylococcal penicillin, cephalosporin
  • vancomycin to cover MRSA
  • nafcillin or cefazolin for treatment of
    documented MSSA infection
  • If the patient has undergone a neurosurgical
    procedure recently, the penicillin should be
    combined with a third-generation cephalosporin
    and an aminoglycoside.
  • gram-negative bacilli ( with a third- or a
    fourth-generation cephalosporin, such as
    ceftazidime or cefepime, respectively),in
    suspected gram-negative bacterial infection of
    other sites, such as the urinary tract.
  • Gram-stain and culture results are used to guide
    therapy

35
Points
  • - Neurologic function
  • - signs of sepsis
  • - imaging findings
  • should be closely monitored after treatment
    begins (medically)
  • Subsequent development of an immunocompromising
    condition or intake of immunosuppressive agents
    may result in recurrence of SEA long after the
    completion of antibiotic therapy 1
  • In patients with SEA associated with an infected
    spinal cord stimulator, it is crucial to remove
    the whole stimulator system to reduce the
    likelihood of recurring implant-related epidural
    infection 2
  • 1- Harrington P, Millner PA, Veale D.
    Inappropriate medical management of spinal
    epidural abscess. Ann Rheum Dis 2001
  • 2- Arxer A, Busquets C, Vilaplana J, Villalonga
    A. Subacute epidural abscess after spinal cord
    stimulator implantation. Eur J Anaesthesiol 2003

36
Points
  • unexplained persistent or recurrent epidural
    infection may be assessed for rare sources of
    infection
  • esophageal tear (in the case of cervical epidural
    abscess)
  • intestinalspinal fistula (in the case of
    thoracolumbar abscess).
  • Although there have been sporadic reports in
    which glucocorticoid therapy has been associated
    with an adverse outcome in patients who already
    had a severe case of spinal epidural abscess,1 it
    may help to reduce swelling in patients with
    progressive neurologic compromise who are
    awaiting surgical decompression.
  • 1- Danner RL, Hartman BJ. Update of spinal
    epidural abscess 35 cases and review of the
    literature. Rev Infect Dis 1987

37
Prognosis
  • No studies have been done to assist in predicting
    prognosis.
  • Prognosis in general is related to the duration
    of spinal cord dysfunction and the degree of cord
    impairment at the time of diagnosis

38
Complications of SEA
  • 1- Irreversible paralysis (4 to 22 of pt) 1,2
  • 2- bladder dysfunction
  • 3- decubiti (decubitus ulcer, pressure sore)
  • 4- supine hypertension
  • 5- recurrent sepsis
  • 6- UTI
  • 7- Pneumonia (in cervical abscess) 3
  • 8- death 5 (uncontrolled sepsis, meningitis,
    others)
  • 1- Khanna RK, Malik GM, Rock JP, Rosenblum ML.
    Spinal epidural abscess evaluation of factors
    influencing outcome. Neurosurgery 1996
  • 2- Danner RL, Hartman BJ. Update of spinal
    epidural abscess 35 cases and review of the
    literature. Rev Infect Dis 1987
  • 3- Soehle M, Wallenfang T. Spinal epidural
    abscesses clinical manifestations, prognostic
    factors, and outcomes. Neurosurgery 2002

39
Decubitus ulcer
40
Clinical Trails Done
41
Delay diagnosis in ER department
  • Residual motor weakness was present in 45 of
    these patients vs. only 13 of patients without
    diagnostic delays
  • Department of Emergency Medicine, University of
    California, San Diego, San Diego, California USA.

42
Clinical presentation in 46 pt., retrospective
study
  • - DM 46
  • - frequent venous puncture 35
  • - spinal trauma 24
  • - history of spinal surgery 22
  • Section of Infection Diseases, Department of
    Internal Medicine, Chi-Mei Medical Center,
    Tainan, Taiwan.

43
Presenting symptomssame study
  • - Localized spinal pain 89
  • - paralysis 80
  • - fever/chills 67
  • - radicular pain 57
  • Section of Infection Diseases, Department of
    Internal Medicine, Chi-Mei Medical Center,
    Tainan, Taiwan

44
Investigation75 pt. retrospective
  • - Raised ESR 95
  • - Peripheral leukocytosis 60
  • - MRI finding 100
  • Department of Neurological Surgery, Johns Hopkins
    Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

45
Thank you for your time
  • Dr.Wala'a Gholam
  • KAAU 2007
  • 4th year medical student
  • www.medkaau.com/vb

Source used - The new England journal o f
medicine, review article 2006 - E-medicine
website
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