Abstract
In three to five percent of active cases of tuberculosis, skeletal lesions develop. Typically, these occur on the vertebrae and are destructive in nature. In this paper, we examined cases of skeletal tuberculosis from a skeletal collection (Galler Collection) with focus on the manifestation of bony changes due to tuberculosis in various body regions in association with antibiotic introduction. This skeletal collection was created in 1925–1977 by a pathologist at the University Hospital in Zürich, Ernst Galler. It includes the remains of 2426 individuals with documented clinical histories as well as autopsies. It contained 29 cases of skeletal tuberculosis lesions. We observed natural healing of vertebral lesions through several processes including fusion of vertebrae, bone deposition and fusion of posterior elements. In these cases, we observed a higher frequency and proportion of bone deposition and fusion of posterior vertebral elements where pharmacological agents were used. There were also four cases of artificial healing through surgically induced posterior spinal fusion. With the introduction of pharmaceutical treatments, the number of individuals with multiple tuberculous foci decreased from 80% to 25% when compared to individuals who did not receive any drug therapy. Investigation of comorbidities showed that pneumonia, pleuritis and being underweight were consistently present, even with pharmaceutical treatment. Our results have applications in palaeopathological diagnoses where healing and consequent bone deposition may complicate differential diagnoses.
Highlights
In palaeopathology, diagnosis of tuberculosis is rare because skeletal lesions occur in no more than 5% of all active cases while these lesions are not always pathognomonic
Galler 1 was sent to the Natural History Museum in Basel because of insufficient space to store this part of the Galler collection
Three additional non-spinal cases were discovered for the first (2 cases, 7%) and second (2 cases, 3%) time periods during the original search. This first part of this study focused on spinal lesions as they are the most commonly recognized diagnostic lesion for TB
Summary
Diagnosis of tuberculosis is rare (review in [1]) because skeletal lesions occur in no more than 5% of all active cases while these lesions are not always pathognomonic. It is important to present well documented cases of skeletal TB involvement to improve the possibility of palaeopathological diagnosis. Tuberculosis (TB) is primarily a pulmonary disease that can affect individuals of all ages, but occurs mostly among individuals with lowered immune function [2,3]. Signs and symptoms can range from an active, debilitating illness in those with low immunity to a chronic, sub-clinical, latent infection in those with sufficient immunity to control the bacterium [7,8]
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