Confusion as the presenting manifestation of vertebral osteomyelitis: a case report
- PMID: 1286957
Confusion as the presenting manifestation of vertebral osteomyelitis: a case report
Abstract
A 44-year-old patient presented with increasing confusion. He was first diagnosed as having intermittent pressure hydrocephalus but a further evaluation showed CSF pleocytosis and hypoglycorrhachia. Five weeks later, his physical examination was unrevealing. Nuclear imaging techniques were conflicting, with negative gallium- and indium-labelled white blood cells scans but a Tc scan pointing towards a vertebral infection. A well-demarcated lesion in the T9 vertebral body, demonstrated by CT scan, confirmed the diagnosis of vertebral osteomyelitis. Although we were unable to recover the causative organism, antibiotic treatment for presumed staphylococcal osteomyelitis resulted in full recovery. This case indicates that vertebral osteomyelitis may cause significant meningeal inflammation even in the absence of epidural or subdural abscess. We recommend that in patients with meningitis without a clear etiology vertebral osteomyelitis should be considered and pursued with CT scannings of the vertebrae, a procedure that can yield positive findings even when other scanning modalities are negative.
Comment in
-
Innovations in the diagnosis and management of osteomyelitis.Isr J Med Sci. 1992 Dec;28(12):902-3. Isr J Med Sci. 1992. PMID: 1286969 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Medical