SPINAL TUBERCULOSIS: ROLE OF MRI IN DECIDING THE DURATION OF ANTITUBERCULAR THERAPY
Mahesh Shinde, Mihir R. Patel, Bibhas Das Gupta, Atharva Sharma, Dheer Upadhyay, Shreyasi Chiwadshetti, Yogeshwari Patil, Tejas Dhage, et al. (12 authors)
GLOBAL JOURNAL FOR RESEARCH ANALYSIS · 2024-08
Abstract
Introduction: The most common extrapulmonary location of TB is the spine, accounting for more than 50% of musculoskeletal TB. MRI is the most valuable method for detecting early disease and is the preferred technique to dene the activity and extent of infection. It is also considered the imaging modality of choice for followup of tuberculous patients managed by operative or nonoperative treatment of tuberculous spine. Follow-up MRI can make a big difference in spinal tuberculosis; it can clearly show the change in the vertebral body and intervertebral space, paraspinal abscess, and the kyphosis angle after the treatment, which can provide a reference for clinical treatment and estimating prognosis. Role of MRI in deciding stoppage of anti-tubercular treatment in spinal tuberculosis. Aims and Objectives: Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective and prospective observational study on 62 patients of all ages and either sex of spinal TB who sequentially underwent MRI pre-treatment and every 6 months after starting treatment till complete resolution. Results: Out of 62 spinal tuberculosis patients, higher incidence is noted in females (42 patients,65%) with the most common age group affected being 21 to 30 years (20 patients,32%) with predominant involvement of thoracic spine (35 patients, 56.5%) followed by lumbar spine (16 patients,25.8%) and cervical spine (3 patients,4.8%), with 8 patients (12.9%) having skip lesions. Of 62 patients, 34 (54.8%) were positive for gene expert, and 17(27.4) were positive for culture. 36 (56%) patients underwent decompression and instrumentation, and 26 (46%) were managed conservatively. At the end of the study,42 patients showed complete or near complete resolution. A total (42 patients,67.7%) had stopped AKT based on MRI resolution. The remaining 20 patients (32.3%) with partial and no resolution were continued on AKT for 18 months. MRI is the bes Conclusion: t modality to diagnose and monitor response to antitubercular treatment and is the best modality to stop antitubercular therapy depending upon complete resolution.
MeSH terms
- Tuberculosis
- Duration (music)
- Medicine
- Radiology
- Internal medicine