| Literature DB >> 31126264 |
Naoki Kadota1, Tsutomu Shinohara2, Hiroyuki Hino3, Yuichiro Goda4, Yoshiro Murase5, Satoshi Mitarai5, Fumitaka Ogushi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pleural involvement by non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) in patients without distinct pulmonary disease is extremely rare. Vertebral osteomyelitis (VO) with or without pulmonary disease is also a rare clinical presentation of NTM infection, and pleural spread of NTM from VO has not been reported. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Empyema; Mycobacterium abscessus ssp. abscessus; Vertebral osteomyelitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31126264 PMCID: PMC6534929 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-019-0860-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Fig. 1Imaging findings before antimycobacterial treatment (a T1-weighted spinal MRI obtained 2 months before admission, b spinal CT obtained 3 weeks before admission, c enhanced chest CT scan on admission, d chest X-ray film after treatment with ampicillin/sulbactam for 11 days, e chest X-ray film during chest drainage and administration of cefoperazone/sulbactam following thoracoscopic curettage, f chest CT scan one month after chest tube removal). Spinal MRI and CT detected a T7/8 vertebral lesion (circled). Chest drainage achieved satisfactory re-expansion of the right lung. After removal of the chest tube, a paravertebral lesion was detected on CT (circled)
Fig. 2Chest CT scans (a-c) and spinal MRI (d-f T1-weighted, g-i fat-suppressed T2-weighted) obtained after initiation of antimycobacterial treatment (a, d and g at 1 month, b, e and h at 3 months, c, f and i at 2 years). Both the VO (bone destruction on CT and low signal on T1-weighted MRI (circled)) and the abscess (paravertebral lesion on CT and high signal on fat-suppressed T2-weighted MRI (arrow)) improved gradually over 2 years