Abstract

BackgroundSpontaneous spondylodiscitis (SD) is an inflammation of the vertebral endplate and the intervertebral disc with no prior surgery or intervention. The treatment of spontaneous pyogenic SD mainly consists of systemic antibiotics and rest. Some cases require surgery due to failure of medical treatment or due to neurological compromise. Due to the disease heterogeneity, there are no standardized, widely adopted treatment protocols. We conducted this study to assess the clinical outcome of the different treatment modalities.ResultsThis is a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data of patients with spontaneous non-tuberculous spondylodiscitis. Thirty-eight patients were identified, including 14 males and 24 females. The mean age was 49 years. Twenty-three patients underwent surgery from the start while 15 patients received conservative medical treatment. Among the latter, 8 patients showed disease progression and required surgical intervention. The ODI/NDI at 1 year (mean = 8) was significantly better than before treatment (mean = 18). Among 11 patients with motor deficit at presentation, 8 improved and 3 remained stable. There were 14 complications, including 11 minor and 3 major, requiring one revision surgery.ConclusionsSurgical decompression and debridement with or without instrumented fusion for complicated SD cases is a safe and effective treatment modality. Close follow-up is needed in case of conservative treatment for early detection of treatment failure and disease progression. Baseline characteristic variabilities in patients with spontaneous pyogenic SD could predict conservative treatment failure, but this needs to be validated in larger series.

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