Abstract
A 22-year-old man was admitted to hospital after being assaulted. He complained of a painful neck and upper limbs, with weakness and numbness of his upper limbs.
Initial treatment was skull traction for six weeks, during which the motor power in the upper limbs recovered. CT scan of the cervical spine showed a lytic expanding bone lesion in the atlas. At 10 weeks he was transferred to a Spinal Centre, walking normally, with good bladder and bowel control. He was complaining of intermittent occipital headaches and pain at the cervicothoracic junction. He was wearing a cervical orthosis. His neck movements were guarded and markedly restricted. No neurological deficit was detected. A right-sided brachiocephalic artery angiogram showed no abnormality. MR scan showed definite narrowing of the spinal canal at the C2 vertebral level and stress studies some vertebral instability at the atlanto-axial level. Under general anaesthetic a transoral biopsy, curettage, and bone grafting of the atlas was carried out. The biopsy material comprised white membranous-type material, which had the histological features of hydatid cysts. A posterior spinal fusion with instrumentation was performed over posterior vertebral arches Cl to C3. Postoperatively ultrasound of the abdomen and radiograph of the chest did not reveal any further evidence of hydatid disease. Treatment with albendazole was commenced. The diagnosis was not anticipated preoperatively.
The abstracts were prepared by Professor M. B. E. Sweet. Correspondence should be addressed to him at The Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Medical School, University of Witwatersrand, 7 York Road, Parktown, Johannesburg, 2193 South Africa