Bone TBC
Bone TBC
Bone TBC
1. Initial stage
2. Second stage
3. Third stage
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drains infected material and induces granuloma in peripheral
positions, while center area fills gradually with cazeum.
Clinically, it is a practically painless tumefaction with a tender
center, without local inflammatory response. It may be difficult
to locate and may readily migrate due to gravity, digging its
way through tissues and cleavage spaces (aponeurosis, blood
vessels, and orifices) thanks to gravity. Under natural
circumstances, it will reach the skin, inducing necrosis from
inside out and festering outside. Such festering sites may be
subjects for common germ infections.
Cold abscess structure comprises:
- The wall - it has 2 layers – one internal, formed by TB
follicles and the presence of BK.
- one external, with granulation tissue,
ensuring spreading to neighboring tissues.
- The content is a yellow –greenish - gray colored liquid, with
debris and cazeum, possibly small sequester. There is no
connection between the size of the cold abscess and that of the
site. It represents a natural way of evacuation for the infection
products and it is diverted by gravity.
Pathological anatomy
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a) Macroscopic lesions
b) Microscopic lesions
Debut features
217
- Pain is the most
important debut sign,
bringing the patients to
the hospital. Pain is
slowly occurring,
persistent, more
intense in the evening,
emphasized by effort
and clamed by rest,
not depending on
weather and it is never
completely relieved, as
even in the calm
periods it is still
present as an annoying
sensation.
Examination
X-ray assessment
Evolution stage
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- toxic effect because of necrotic material resorbtion:
weakening, general condition failure, anemia, insomnia,
paleness, increased white cell count, increased ESR, etc.
- mechanic compression upon other organs: spine cord in
vertebral TB, pharynx, aorta, etc.
- festering and infection with common germs, showing signs
of acute non-specific infection. Festering may have
relapses. Festering displays cold inflammation of the orifice
margins, with elimination of oily or serous, light colored
pus with little blood involvement. Festering can open inside
other organs. Common germ over-infection will trigger
acute inflammatory symptoms and soon require emergency
surgical approach. The outer orifice of the festering trail can
be unique or multiple. It’s exterior aspect can give
information concerning the stage of the TB infection
development:
- prominent, blood - red bud –like formations signify
sequester;
104. Hump in
Pott’s disease
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- local transparent membrane extension and neighboring
soft tissue involvement – aggravation;
- small pus-emitting buds – long term development;
- retracted scar is equal to healing. Small fragile crust is
visible first, but it comes down and reopens the festering
trail. Soon it closes again – for good – with thin scar
tissue that becomes wider later on.
x-ray assessment
Involution
Para-clinical assessment
Biological assessment can offer probability and certainty
arguments. The diagnosis proceeding for bone and joint TB is a
very elaborate one and one has to pass several steps and stages
in order to achieve a clear positive conclusion.
Probability factors that can give us a hint:
- ESR- moderate to relatively high increases (40-90mm/h);
especially useful in assessing
dynamics of the disease;
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106. Presence of bacilli in
stained sputum
Positive diagnosis
223
- Is joint pain driven by joint elements or just a distant reflex
of another far away lesion?
- Is joint pain accompanied by inflammation? A serious
assessment off past diseases and a correct clinical approach
can give a positive answer.
Once the suspicion of TB is formulated, the patient should be
directed to a specialist. Specialist examination and specific
testing will clarify things: either positive identification (and
immediate setting of the specific treatment) or denial of
diagnosis and the pursue for another, hopefully correct one.
Bone and joint TB diagnosis is consequently based on
several steps:
- anamnesis assessment
- general and local clinical evaluation
- x-ray assessment
- lab tests
- bacteriology tests
- pathological anatomy assessment
The diagnosis proceeding is very important in order to
establish positive or negative decision. There is also legal
responsibility if a case of real TB infection rests undiscovered
and the source – patient goes on infecting other people. Since
there is a need for some type of quantification in order to
standardize the diagnosis and the therapeutical answer, some
assessment criteria have been designed and they have been
awarded points, as follows:
Evolution
225
Early lesions may heal with convenient preservation of joint
function, whereas older lesions of the bones and joints will heal
by bone destruction and joint stiffness. Lesions may close
imperfectly with follicle confinement. Follicle presence may
delay healing and consequently require surgical extirpation.
Treatment principles
It consists of 4 items:
1. Drug therapy (specific and helper)
2. Orthopedic measures
3. Surgical proceedings
4. Joint rehabilitation
- 3 - 4 drugs association;
- Continuous treatment for 6-12 months;
- SST (strict surveillance treatment) with drugs administrated
2 –3 times a week;
- General and local administration;
- Treatment according to evolution stage;
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- Attack stage –
4 drugs will be used: INH., Riphampycin, ETB and
Pirazinamide or Streptomycin. First three of them will be given
within the first 3 months (morning single dose) and the fourth
will be added starting the 4th month.
- Maintenance stage –
INH and Riphampycin in daily supervised administration from
5th to 9th month.
- Consolidation stage –
INH and Riphampycin twice a week, until the 12th month.
Dosage:
- INH – 5 mg / kg / day
- Riphampycin -10 mg / kg / day
- Pirazinamid – 30 – 35 mg / kg / day
- ETB – 20 - 25 mg / kg / day
Side – effects
Riphampycin –
- major reactions - high intensity hypersensitive (allergic)
reactions; patients resuming treatment after some time,
especially by discontinuous therapy, are most likely to be
affected.
- minor reactions – non-hepatic jaundice, especially in
alcoholics. Temporary interruption of the treatment, until
jaundice subsides, is the adequate measure to take.
Headache, feverishness and shivers may accompany
discontinuous treatment, as well as digestive disturbances
(nausea, lack of appetite, vomiting).
Pirazinamid
228
Etambutol (ETB)
Streptomycin
Patients with kidney failure may currently use INH, RIF and
PIR (Pirazinamide). STREPTO and ETB are formally banned,
yet they could be employed if kidney functional tests are
available for monitoring.
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Helper Treatment
Orthopedic means
Surgical means
231
Extra-rachis migration
Intra-rachis migration
Clinical development
X-ray assessment
- ESR monitoring
- I.d.r. for PPD
- Scintigraphy may reveal TB sites earlier;
- Bacteriology and histology tests;
Dorsal area Pott disease is the most frequent and has the most
typical appearance.
Diagnosis
233
Positive diagnosis is based upon:
- clinical arguments –
- biological arguments –
- radiological arguments
- anamnesis arguments –
- bacteriological arguments –
Complications
Treatment
Sacro-iliac joint TB
Hip TB
235