» Articles » PMID: 24766063

Vertebral Osteomyelitis: Clinical Features and Diagnosis

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2014 Apr 29
PMID 24766063
Citations 17
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

We aimed to describe clinical and diagnostic features of vertebral osteomyelitis for differential diagnosis and treatment. This is a prospective observational study performed between 2002 and 2012 in Ankara Numune Education and Research Hospital in Ankara, Turkey. All the patients with vertebral osteomyelitis were followed for from 6 months to 3 years. In total, 214 patients were included in the study, 113 out of 214 (53%) were female. Out of 214 patients, 96 (45%) had brucellar vertebral osteomyelitis (BVO), 63 (29%) had tuberculous vertebral osteomyelitis (TVO), and 55 (26%) had pyogenic vertebral osteomyelitis (PVO). Mean number of days between onset of symptoms and establishment of diagnosis was greater with the patients with TVO (266 days) than BVO (115 days) or PVO (151 days, p <0.001). In blood cultures, Brucella spp. were isolated from 35 of 96 BVO patients (35%). Among 55 PVO patients, the aetiological agent was isolated in 11 (20%) patients. For tuberculin skin test >15 mm, sensitivity was 0.66, specificity was 0.97, positive predictive value was 0.89, negative predictive value was 0.88, and receiver operating characteristics area was 0.8. Tuberculous and brucellar vertebral osteomyelitis remained the leading causes of vertebral osteomyelitis with delayed diagnosis. In differential diagnosis of vertebral osteomyelitis, consumption of unpasteurized cheese, dealing with husbandry, sweating, arthralgia, hepatomegaly, elevated alanine transaminase, and lumbar involvement in magnetic resonance imaging were found to be predictors of BVO, thoracic involvement in magnetic resonance imaging and tuberculin skin test > 15 mm were found to be predictors of TVO, and history of spinal surgery and leucocytosis were found to be predictors of PVO.

Citing Articles

Analysis of the clinical factors affecting the negative rate of metagenomic next-generation sequencing in patients with spinal infection.

Zhang G, Liu Q, He D, Hu X, Li Y, Tang M Int J Surg. 2024; 111(1):1458-1460.

PMID: 38990340 PMC: 11745692. DOI: 10.1097/JS9.0000000000001913.


Clinical features and outcome of vertebral osteomyelitis after spinal injection: is it worth the price?.

Yagdiran A, Paul G, Meyer-Schwickerath C, Scheder-Bieschin J, Tobys D, Kernich N Infection. 2023; 51(3):599-607.

PMID: 37071309 PMC: 10205873. DOI: 10.1007/s15010-023-02024-9.


Utility of disc space aspirate cell counts and differentials in the diagnosis of native vertebral osteomyelitis.

Riaz T, Howard M, Diehn F, Tande A, Ross C, Huddleston P J Bone Jt Infect. 2022; 7(5):213-219.

PMID: 36415688 PMC: 9673032. DOI: 10.5194/jbji-7-213-2022.


Pyogenic spondylitis caused by Klebsiella pneumoniae: should the possibility of hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae be considered?.

Hwang J, Lee S, Lee J, Hwang J BMC Infect Dis. 2022; 22(1):801.

PMID: 36303118 PMC: 9615223. DOI: 10.1186/s12879-022-07785-6.


A Pain in the Neck: An Adolescent with Neck Pain.

Starnes L, Krehnbrink M, Carroll A, Brown C Pediatr Rev. 2022; 43(3):174-177.

PMID: 35229110 PMC: 8996527. DOI: 10.1542/pir.2020-004168.