High risk and low prevalence diseases: Spinal epidural abscess.
TL;DR: In this article , a review highlights the pearls and pitfalls of spinal epidural abscess, including presentation, initial evaluation, and management in the emergency department (ED) based on current evidence.
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Abstract: Spinal epidural abscess (SEA) is a rare but serious condition that carries with it a high rate of morbidity and mortality.This review highlights the pearls and pitfalls of SEA, including presentation, initial evaluation, and management in the emergency department (ED) based on current evidence.SEA is a suppurative infection and infectious disease emergency that may result in significant morbidity and even mortality. It is a challenging diagnosis due to its range of risk factors and variety of presentations with up to 90% of patients misdiagnosed on their first ED visit. Factors associated with increased risk of SEA include immunocompromise, bacteremia, contiguous infection (e.g., psoas muscle abscess, osteomyelitis, skin infection), and spinal instrumentation. However, the absence of risk factors cannot be used to exclude SEA. The classic triad of back pain, fever, and neurologic deficit occurs in less than 8% of cases, though back pain is a common presenting symptom. Up to half of patients experience a neurologic abnormality, but fever is absent in 50%. Laboratory assessment may assist with inflammatory markers elevated in the majority of cases. Diagnosis includes magnetic resonance imaging with and without contrast and blood cultures, and management includes spinal specialist consultation and antibiotic therapy.An understanding of SEA can assist emergency clinicians in diagnosing and managing this potentially deadly disease.
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Citations
High risk and low prevalence diseases: Adult bacterial meningitis.
TL;DR: In this article , a review highlights pearls and pitfalls of acute bacterial meningitis in adults, including presentation, diagnosis, and management in the emergency department (ED) based on current evidence.
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Extensive spinal epidural abscess caused by Staphylococcus epidermidis: A case report and literature review
TL;DR: In this article , a 70-year-old man complained of intense pain in the cervical-thoracic-lumbar spine that radiated to the lower extremity, and the spinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a ventral SEA extending from C2 to L4.
Letter to Editor regarding: "High risk and low prevalence diseases: Spinal epidural abscess".
TL;DR: In this article , a 74-year-old woman with a previous cerebrovascular accident (CVA) without residual deficit and no previous psychiatric history presenting for one week of worsening hallucinations progressing from shapes to cats to human figures in the left visual field.
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Utilisation and experience of emergency medical services by patients with back pain: A scoping review
Matt Capsey,Cormac Ryan,Jagjit Mankelow,Denis Martin +3 more
TL;DR: How and why patients with back pain access EMS, the care provided, and patients' and clinicians' perceptions of EMS are explored in a scoping review.
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References
Keys to diagnosis and management of spinal epidural abscesses: 9 years of institutional experience.
Keith W. Lyons,Steven P. Baltic,Matthew A. Pappas,Janae A. Dunchack,Paul M. Werth,Kevin J. McGuire,Adam M. Pearson,William A. Abdu +7 more
TL;DR: Almost 20% of SEA patients failed initial medical management; they had significantly greater CRP, longer symptom duration, more commonly had neurologic deficits, and concurrent non-spinal infections.
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Spinal Epidural Abscess: Diagnosis, Management, and Outcomes
Joseph H. Schwab,Akash A. Shah +1 more
TL;DR: Risk factor assessment to determine the need for definitive MRI reduces diagnostic delays compared with relying on clinical or laboratory findings alone and incorporation of powerful predictive statistics such as machine learning methods is recommended.
Spontaneous spinal epidural abscess in patients 50 years of age and older: a 15-year institutional perspective and review of the literature: clinical article.
Owoicho Adogwa,Isaac O. Karikari,Kevin Carr,Max O. Krucoff,Divya Ajay,Parastou Fatemi,Edgar Perez,Joseph S. Cheng,Carlos A. Bagley,Robert E. Isaacs +9 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that in patients 50 years of age and older, early surgical decompression combined with intravenous antimicrobial therapy was not associated with superior clinical outcomes when compared with IV antibiotics alone or in combination with surgery alone.
Spinal Epidural Abscess
TL;DR: The most common etiologic agent was Staphylococcus aureus (57%), followed by streptococci (18 per cent) and gram-negative bacilli (13 per cent), the source of infection was osteomyelitis in 38 per cent of cases and bacteremia in 26 per cent.