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Purpose: To evaluate the demographics, presentation, treatment and outcomes of spinal infection in a population of Intravenous Drug Users.
Method: Data on all patients with pyogenic spinal infection presenting to a quaternary referral center was obtained from a prospectively maintain database.
Results: Over the five-year study period, there were 102 patients treated for Primary Pyogenic Infection of the Spine of which 51 were Intravenous Drug Users (IVDU). Of this IVDU group there were 34 males. Mean age was 43 years (range 25 – 57). Twenty-three had HIV, 43 Hepatitis C and 13 Hepatitis B. All were using cocaine, 26 were also using Heroin and 44 more than three recreational drugs. Thirty patients presented with axial pain with a mean duration of 51 days (range 3–120). Thirty-one were ASIA D or worse with eight ASIA A. Mean Motor Score of patients with deficit was 58.6. Most common ASIA Motor Levels were C4 and C5. Mean duration of neurological symptoms was seven days (range 1–60). Blood parameters on admission were in keeping with sepsis in immunocompromised patients. None had previous surgery for spinal infection. Twenty-sex were receiving IV antibiotics for known spinal infection. 44 patients were treated surgically. 32 had infection of the cervical spine, 9 Thoracic and 3 Lumbar. 22 had a posterior approach alone, 13 had anterior only while 9 required combined. Mean operative time was 263 mins (range 62 – 742). 13 required tracheostomy. 7 required early revision for hardware failure and 2 for surgical wound infection. Mean duration of antibiotic treatment was 49 days (range 28–116). 26 patients had single agent therapy. 17 had MSSA and 17 MRSA. At discharge 28 patients had neurological improvement (mean 20 ASIA points, range 1–55), 11 had deterioration (mean 13, range 1–50) and 5 were unchanged. There were no in-hospital deaths. At 2 years after index admission 13 patients were dead and none were attending the unit for follow-up.
Conclusion: Primary pyogenic spinal infection in IVDU’s typically presents with sepsis and acute cervical quadriplegia. Surgical management must be prompt and aggressive with significant neurological improvement expected in the majority of patients.
Purpose: Prospective Observational Population Study to describe the incidence, demographics and pattern of spinal cord injury in British Columbia, Canada, for 10 years to 2004.
Method: Systematic analysis of prospectively collected spine registry data (Vertebase) at Vancouver General Hospital, B.C., Canada from 1995–2004.
Results: During the 10-year study period the 938 patients were admitted with a traumatic spinal cord injury. The Annual Population-Standardized Incidences ranged from 19.94 to 27.27 per million, with a median incidence of 23.34/million and with no significant change over the study period. The mean age was 39.7 years (34.73 in 1995 and 42.1 in 2004, p<
0.05) with a range of 16–92 years. 79.74 % were males. 48.2% of patients were AISA A on admission, of which 48% were quadraparetic. The most common levels of spinal cord injury were C5 (17.3%), C6 (10%), T1 (9.4%), T12 (5.8%). The Mean ASIA score was 50.22 with a range from 0–100. 19.8% of patients had a GCS£13. The mean ISS was 26.02, range of 0 – 75. Motor vehicle collisions and falls were responsible for 59% and 30% of admissions respectively. Mean length of in-hospital stay was 34 days, ranging from 1 – 275 days. In hospital mortality rate was 2.9%. ASIA Grade, Total Motor Score and anatomical level of injury all correlated directly with Length of stay (p<
0.0001).
Conclusion: Acute Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury remains a major cause of significant morbidity among young males. The incidence appears to be increasing in the elderly. Modern multidisciplinary care has greatly reduced the associated acute mortality. Despite multiple prevention strategies the Annual Population-Standardized Incidence remained unchanged over the study period.