| Literature DB >> 29721349 |
Ali Akhaddar1, Hassan Baallal1, Abderrahim Elktaibi2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgical site infections following spinal surgery, including spinal abscesses, are rare but serious as they are major causes of morbidity, and even mortality. They are, however, rarely attributed to infected, retained surgical cottonoids or sponges (textiloma or gossypiboma) inadvertently left in an operative field. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 53-year-old female with a history of two prior spinal operations at the L4-S1 levels (11 and 2 years previously) presented over a few weeks with the acute onset of a cauda equina syndrome (e.g., paraparesis and acute urinary incontinence). The patient demonstrated a mildly elevated white blood cell count (12,600/mm3) and abnormally increased C-reactive protein level that correlated with the magnetic resonance imaging that showed a dorsal epidural abscess extending from the L4 to S1 levels. At surgery, an encapsulated posterior epidural abscess was drained. Surgical findings included a granulomatous lesion consistent with a retained surgical cottonoid and was removed from the antero-inferior portion of the abscess wall at S1. Culture of the thick fibrotic abscess wall grew Klebsiella oxytoca. After 2 months of ciprofloxacin, the patient's infection cleared but the motor deficit only partially resolved.Entities:
Keywords: Cauda equina syndrome; gossypiboma; retained cottonoid; spinal epidural abscess; surgical complication; surgical site infection; textiloma
Year: 2018 PMID: 29721349 PMCID: PMC5909092 DOI: 10.4103/sni.sni_64_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Neurol Int ISSN: 2152-7806
Figure 1Lumbosacral spinal sagittal post-gadolinium T1-weighted MRI (a), T2-weighted MRI (b), and axial post-gadolinium T1-weighted MRI (c) showing a posterior epidural abscess extending from L4 to S1 with cauda equina compression. Note the ring enhancement
Figure 2Operative view demonstrating an encapsulated epidural collection with purulent material inside (a). Appearance of the abscess wall adhering to a filamentous foreign body (textiloma) (b)
Figure 3Hematoxylin-eosin-stained tissue showing histopathologic features of the granulomatous lesion that contain polynuclear and multinucleated giant cells around cut fibers (arrows) (Medium power magnification)