Bone scintigraphy in tuberculous spondylodiscitis

被引:0
|
作者
H. G. Pandit
P. D. Sonsale
S. S. Shikare
S. Y. Bhojraj
机构
[1] 11,
[2] York House,undefined
[3] Queen Alexandra Hospital,undefined
[4] Cosham,undefined
[5] Portsmouth PO6 3LY,undefined
[6] UK,undefined
[7] Derbyshire Royal Infirmary,undefined
[8] Derby,undefined
[9] UK,undefined
[10] B. Nanavati Hospital,undefined
[11] Bombay,undefined
[12] India,undefined
[13] Neurospinal Unit,undefined
[14] P.D Hinduja Hospital,undefined
[15] Bombay,undefined
[16] India,undefined
来源
European Spine Journal | 1999年 / 8卷
关键词
Key words Bone scintigraphy; Tuberculous spondylodiscitis; Sensitivity and specificity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Tuberculous affection of the spine can present in different ways. Plain radiographs may fail to show any abnormality. Bone scintigraphy can be a very useful tool in the diagnosis and management of patients with tuberculous spondylodiscitis. This is a retrospective study of 40 patients in whom bone scan was performed using 99mTc-MDP (technetium methylene diphosphonate) before starting anti-tuberculous therapy or any surgical intervention. Four different types of uptake were noted. The uptake was abnormal in 38 out of 40 patients, giving a sensitivity of 95%. Multicentricity was picked up in 25% of cases. No skull lesion was noticed in any of these patients. Rib lesions were found in six patients (ten ribs affected). The rib lesion was always a typical band pattern. This paper outlines the advantages as well as limitations of bone scan in tuberculous affection of the spine.
引用
收藏
页码:205 / 209
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Lumbar mass as the presentation form of a tuberculous spondylodiscitis
    de Oliveira Barbosa, Marcilio Diogo
    Calheiros da Silva, Rodrigo Sodre
    Garcia, Flavio Assad
    Acioly, Marcus Andre
    ARQUIVOS DE NEURO-PSIQUIATRIA, 2011, 69 (04) : 725 - 725
  • [42] Minimally Invasive Surgical Treatment for Tuberculous Spondylodiscitis
    Ito, M.
    Sudo, H.
    Abumi, K.
    Kotani, Y.
    Takahata, M.
    Fujita, M.
    Minami, A.
    MINIMALLY INVASIVE NEUROSURGERY, 2009, 52 (5-6) : 250 - 253
  • [43] Tuberculous spondylodiscitis with a cervicothoracic spinal cord compression
    Molina-Gil, Javier
    Rodriguez, Lucia Meijide
    Amorin-Diaz, Manuel
    MEDICINA CLINICA, 2021, 157 (06): : E285 - E286
  • [44] Spinal cord compression in a patient with tuberculous spondylodiscitis
    Tiresse, Nabil
    Abid, Ahmed
    PAN AFRICAN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2018, 31
  • [45] EVALUATION OF PYOGENIC, BRUCELLA AND TUBERCULOUS SPONDYLODISCITIS CASES
    Kurt, Esma Kepenek
    Kandemir, Bahar
    Erayman, Ibrahim
    Bitirgen, Mehmet
    ACTA MEDICA MEDITERRANEA, 2021, 37 (04): : 1933 - 1940
  • [46] RADIONUCLIDE SCINTIGRAPHY IN TUBERCULOUS ENTERITIS
    PETTENGELL, K
    GARB, M
    HOULDER, A
    BECKER, P
    SIMJEE, A
    GASTROINTESTINAL RADIOLOGY, 1990, 15 (02): : 148 - 150
  • [47] Complementary scintigraphy in tuberculous osteomyelitis
    Mansberg, VJ
    Murray, IPC
    Rossleigh, MA
    CLINICAL NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 1997, 22 (11) : 776 - 778
  • [48] Lumbar tuberculous spondylodiscitis: a minimally invasive surgical approach
    Carvalho, Bruno
    Pereira, Paulo
    Silva, Pedro Santos
    Silva, Joana
    Pinto, Madalena
    Vaz, Rui
    ACTA REUMATOLOGICA PORTUGUESA, 2011, 36 (01): : 57 - 60
  • [49] TUBERCULOUS SPONDYLODISCITIS IS NOT UNUSUAL: ABOUT A SERIES OF 35 CASES
    Alaya, Z.
    Amri, D.
    El Amri, N.
    Baccouche, K.
    Belghali, S.
    Zeglaoui, H.
    Bouajina, E.
    ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES, 2014, 73 : 1085 - 1085
  • [50] Tuberculous spondylodiscitis: epidemiology, clinical features, treatment, and outcome
    Trecarichi, E. M.
    Di Meco, E.
    Mazzotta, V.
    Fantoni, M.
    EUROPEAN REVIEW FOR MEDICAL AND PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2012, 16 : 58 - 72