Abstract

Laminectomy, a common neurosurgical procedure that decompresses the spinal cord, is the definitive surgical treatment for spinal epidural abscesses. Although complications after laminectomy occur infrequently, they can cause significant morbidity and health care resource usage. These complications include soft tissue collections like a persistent and/or new abscess or a hematoma. The preferred method of diagnosis for spinal soft tissue collections is magnetic resonance imaging. However, traditional neuroimaging poses significant challenges in patients with spinal hardware due to metallic artifact precluding appropriate visualization of anatomy and pathology. This was a case of a patient with extensive spinal hardware where visualization of the spinal cord by postoperative sonography was made feasible by a lack of bone after a laminectomy. Point-of-care ultrasound, a convenient bedside tool with the ability to detect soft tissue collections easily, was used to monitor for postoperative recurrence of a spinal epidural abscess in this patient. Patients with an intact spine do not have adequate acoustic windows due to posterior vertebral anatomy. In postlaminectomy patients without posterior vertebral structures, sonography may offer a diagnostic modality for postoperative monitoring. Ultrasonographers can employ spinal cord sonography, particularly when the indication for decompressive laminectomy was a localized fluid collection or abscess.

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