Aims Spondylodiscitis (SpD), a debilitating infective condition of the spine, mandates early diagnosis and institution of appropriate therapy, for which accurate microbiology and histological evaluation of the affected tissue is vital. The objectives of the study were to assess the correlation between clinical and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings with histopathology (HPE) and microbiology (MB) in clinically diagnosed spondylodiscitis. Settings and design This was a prospective study of 34 consecutive patients reporting at the outpatient department of a tertiary hospital with clinical and imaging features of SpD, who underwent image-guided/surgical biopsy of lesions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Orthop Case Rep
January 2018
Introduction: The swellings of foot are common but the lesions of metatarsals are rare. The purpose is to highlight these four cases which had almost common presentations but had different etiologies.
Case Report: A series of four cases all of which had similar presentation, but different etiologies.
A 15-yr old boy presented with low backache for 4 months associated with weakness of left lower limb. MRI of lumbosacral spine showed a sacral lesion with intraspinal and presacral soft tissue extension with neural compression. A diagnosis of tuberculosis was considered in the view of high prevalence in this part of the world, however biopsy revealed Ewing's sarcoma.
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