Spondylodiscitis with/without neurologic impairment is a serious infection, predominantly occurring in high-risk patients. caused spondylodiscitis is very rare. Evidence-based therapeutic concepts for lumbar spondylodiscitis are lacking. A 64-year-old high-risk woman underwent decompression with instrumented lumbar fusion. Six months after index surgery, she developed pyelonephritis, which deteriorated to sepsis and presentation of cauda equina syndrome. She underwent urgent revision with decompression, debridement, and instrumentation removal, and received long-term antibiotics. Culture grew , previously not reported as a cause of spondylodiscitis after elective instrumented lumbar fusion. Emergent debridement and removal of instrumentation, with 2 months of targeted intravenous antibiotics followed by 6 weeks of oral antibiotics led to complete spondylodiscitis resolution. Prompt diagnostics and targeted antibiotic treatment are paramount when dealing with spinal infections, particularly in patients with rare causative pathogens like . Concomitant neurological complications may require emergent surgical management in the case of cauda equina syndrome.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9577107 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2022.998011 | DOI Listing |
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