Epidural abscess (spinal)
Background
- Abscess confined to epidural adipose tissue in spine
- Thoracic and lumbar spine most common; C-spine least common
- Usually hematogenous spread from other source of infection
- S. aureus, strep, pseudomonas, e. coli most common
Risk Factors
- 98% of pts have at least one of the following risk-factors:
- Injection drug use
- Immunocompromised
- Alcohol abuse
- Cancer
- Recent spine procedure
- Recent spine fracture
- Distant site of infection
- Indwelling catheter
- Chronic renal failure
- DM
Clinical Features
- Fever + localized back pain is epidural abscess until proven otherwise
- Classic triad of fever, back pain, and neuro deficits is rare (13%)
- Fever is only present in ~50% of cases
Diagnosis
- Labs
- ESR elevated in >90% of pts
- WBC elevated in only 60% of pts
- Blood cultures are indicated to identify the source organism (Staph in 2/3 of cases)
- Imaging
- MRI is diagnostic test of choice
- CT with IV contrast is acceptable (MRI is preferred)
DDX
- Disc and bony disease
- Vertebral discitis and osteomyelitis
- Metastatic tumors
- Meningitis
- Herpes zoster (prior to appearance of skin lesions)
Treatment
- Early surgical decompression and drainage
- Aspiration (for diagnosis) and Abx may be sufficient for pts w/o neuro deficits
- Antibiotics
- Vanco + metronidazole + (cefotaxime or ceftriaxone or ceftazadine)
- Ceftazidine is preferred if pseudomonas is considered likely
- Can substitute nafcillin or oxacillin for vanco if not MRSA
- Treat for 6-8 weeks
- Vanco + metronidazole + (cefotaxime or ceftriaxone or ceftazadine)
See Also
Source
- UpToDate
- Rosens
- Tintinalli
