Abstract

BackgroundTo explore the therapeutic effect of early surgical intervention for active thoracic spinal tuberculosis (TB) patients with paraparesis and paraplegia.MethodsData on 118 active thoracic spinal TB patients with paraparesis and paraplegia who had undergone surgery at an early stage (within three weeks of paraparesis and paraplegia) from January 2008 to December 2014 were retrospectively analyzed. The operation duration, blood loss, perioperative complication rate, VAS score, ASIA grade and NASCIS score of neurological status rating, Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR), C-reactive protein (CRP), kyphotic Cobb’s angle, and duration of bone graft fusion were analyzed to evaluate the therapeutic effects of surgery.ResultsThe mean operating time was 194.2 minutes, and the mean blood loss was 871.2 ml. The perioperative complication rate was 5.9 %. The mean preoperative VAS score was 5.3, which significantly decreased to 3.2 after the operation and continued decreasing to 1.1 at follow up (P<0.05). All cases achieved an increase of at least one ASIA grade after operation. The rate of full neurological recovery for paraplegia (ASIA grade A and B) was 18.0 % and was significantly lower than the rate (100 %) for paraparesis (ASIA grade C and D) (P<0.05). On the NASCIS scale, the difference in the neurological improvement rate between paraplegia (22.2 % ± 14.1 % in sensation and 52.2 % ± 25.8 % in movement) and paraparesis (26.7 % ± 7.5 % in sensation and 59.4 % ± 7.3 % in movement) was remarkable (P<0.05). Mean preoperative ESR and CRP were 73.1 mm /h and 82.4 mg/L, respectively, which showed a significant increase after operation (P>0.05), then gradually decreased to 11.5 ± 1.8 mm/h and 2.6 ± 0.82 mg/L, respectively, at final follow up (P<0.05). The mean preoperative kyphotic Cobb’s angle was 21.9º, which significantly decreased to 6.5º after operation (P<0.05) while kyphotic correction was not lost during follow up (P>0.05). The mean duration of bone graft fusion was 8.6 ± 1.3 months.ConclusionsEarly surgical intervention may be beneficial for active thoracic spinal TB patients with paraparesis and paraplegia, with surgical intervention being more beneficial for recovery from paraparesis than paraplegia.

Highlights

  • To explore the therapeutic effect of early surgical intervention for active thoracic spinal tuberculosis (TB) patients with paraparesis and paraplegia

  • Blood routine (BR), Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR), C-reactive protein (CRP), and the T-cell spot test for TB infection were conducted for diagnosis

  • All surgeries were carried out successfully without intraoperative iatrogenic neural and vascular injury. 92 patients (92/118, 78 %) underwent one-stage posterior surgery, and 26 patients (26/118, 22 %) underwent posterior decompression and fixation combined with two-stage anterior debridement and interbody fusion

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Summary

Introduction

To explore the therapeutic effect of early surgical intervention for active thoracic spinal tuberculosis (TB) patients with paraparesis and paraplegia. Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by mycobacterium TB (MTB), and its prevalence depends on local economic, hygienic, and medical conditions. TB is found worldwide but is mainly prevalent in developing and undeveloped countries, such as India, China, and certain African countries. The lung is the organ most frequently affected by MTB. The effect of MTB on the lung may result in a cough, expectoration, thoracalgia, hemoptysis, fever, and symptoms of exhaustion. If the lung lesion is not well controlled, other organs can be affected. Spinal TB is one of the most common extrapulmonary types of TB and is the result of a primary lung lesion caused by MTB, transmitted through the Batson plexus [2]

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