| Literature DB >> 31284663 |
Dinesh Ramanathan1, Nikhil Sahasrabudhe1, Esther Kim2.
Abstract
Coccidioidomycosis is a fungal infectious disease caused by the Coccidioides species endemic to Southwestern United States. Symptomatic patients typically present as community-acquired pneumonia. Uncommonly, in about 1% of infections, hematogenous extra pulmonary systemic dissemination involving skin, musculoskeletal system, and meninges occur. Disseminated spinal infection is treated with antifungal drugs and/or surgical treatment. A retrospective review of medical records at our institution was done between January 2009 to December 2018 and we present three cases of spinal coccidioidomycosis and review the current literature. Disseminated coccidioidomycosis can lead to spondylitis that can present as discitis or a localized spinal or paraspinal abscess. Spinal coccidioidomycosis is typically managed with antifungal treatments but can include surgical treatment in the setting poor response to medical therapy, intractable pain, presence of neurological deficits due to compression, or structural spinal instability.Entities:
Keywords: Coccidioidomycosis; spinal infection; spinal pain
Year: 2019 PMID: 31284663 PMCID: PMC6680672 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci9070160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1(a) Axial T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images with contrast showing extensive vertebral body and soft tissue enhancement with compression of the spinal canal at T6. (b) Sagittal T1-weighted MR Images with contrast showing extensive enhancement throughout the vertebral bodies and soft tissue but most significantly at T6–7. (c) Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining of the thoracic bone specimen showing acute osteomyelitis with abundant coccidioides organisms. Multinucleated giant cells with engulfed coccidioides spherules is a characteristic finding. Abundant acute inflammatory changes was noted in the marrow cavity.
Figure 2(a) Sagittal T1-weighted MR images with contrast showing extensive disc space destruction at L1–2 with epidural enhancement. (b) Sagittal T–L junction X-ray showing postoperative changes with a L1–2 corpectomy and instrumented fusion. (c) H&E staining of the intraoperative vertebral body specimen demonstrating the spherules within bone indicating osteomyelitis.
Figure 3(a) Sagittal T1-weighted MR images with contrast showing extensive disc space destruction at C3-4 with epidural enhancement. (b) Sagittal cervical spine CT showing postoperative erosion of the C4 vertebral body significant retrolisthesis of C3 onto C4. (c) H&E stain of the cervical spinal pathologic specimen demonstrating the Coccidioides spherules within soft tissue, which is morphologically compatible with coccidioidomycotic osteomyelitis.
Summary of case reports of coccidioidomycotic osteomyelitis.
| Study | No. of Patients | Medical Treatment Used | Surgical and Medical Treatment (No. of Patients) | Mean Age/Range | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winter et al., (1978) [ | 12 | IV amphotericin | Surgical + medical | 2–35 | Two patients died—one died five years later of coccidioidal meningitis, one died of fulminant spinal infection. |
| Zeppa et al., (1996) [ | 10 | High dose IV liposomal amphotericin B. IV antibiotics with vancomycin and Zosyn for presumed bacterial infection | Surgical + medical (1) | 33 | Successfully treated then developed recurrence two years later despite being on suppressive oral antifungal treatment. |
| Herron et al., (1997) [ | 16 | IV amphotericin B | Medical only group, | 40 | Nine patients who had surgical and medical treatment had remission. Others were in medical only who had lost to follow-up. |
| Wrobel et al., (2001) [ | 23 | Amphotericin and/or fluconazole | Surgical and medical | 9–62 | One: worsened postoperatively. |
| Kakarla et al., (2011) [ | 27 | Amphotericin B, fluconazole, or voriconazole | Medical and surgical treatment | 41.4 | Follow-up for 19/27 patients: |
| Szeyko et al., (2012) [ | 39 | All patients received triazole and 20 also received amphotericin B (usually early in the course) | Medical and surgical | 35 | None of the patients developed recurrence or refractory infection at the site of debridement. |