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Oral Questions Infection: Your Guide to Spinal Abscess Cases

23 Apr 2026 87 min read 147 Views
Illustration of oral questions infection - Dr. Mohammed Hutaif

Key Takeaway

We review everything you need to understand about Oral Questions Infection: Your Guide to Spinal Abscess Cases. The topic of oral questions infection, like an epidural abscess, involves identifying red flags such as age, tumor history, or thoracic pain. Diagnosis typically uses MRI and inflammatory markers. Management for this spinal infection includes urgent surgical decompression for neurological compression, or extended intravenous and oral antibiotics for cases without focal collections or neurological deficits.

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Question 1

A 65-year-old diabetic male presents with insidious onset of back pain, low-grade fever, and progressive bilateral leg weakness over 2 weeks. On examination, he has a T10 sensory level and 3/5 motor strength in both lower extremities. Initial plain radiographs of the thoracic spine are unremarkable. Which of the following is the most appropriate initial diagnostic step?





Explanation

MRI with gadolinium is the gold standard for diagnosing spinal epidural abscess (SEA), demonstrating the collection, degree of spinal cord compression, and identifying associated osteomyelitis or discitis. Given the progressive neurological deficit and suspicion of infection, urgent definitive imaging is crucial. Plain radiographs are insensitive in early disease. CT myelogram is less sensitive for soft tissue detail than MRI and involves radiation and contrast injection into the CSF. Lumbar puncture is generally contraindicated in suspected SEA due to the risk of neurological deterioration or meningitis. EMG is for peripheral nerve pathology. Corticosteroids are contraindicated before definitive diagnosis and debridement in bacterial infections.

Question 2

A patient undergoing hemodialysis develops severe cervical spine pain, fevers, and rapidly progressive quadriparesis. Blood cultures are pending. Given the patient's history, which organism is most likely responsible for a presumed spinal epidural abscess?





Explanation

Staphylococcus aureus is the most common pathogen responsible for spinal epidural abscesses (SEA), accounting for 60-90% of cases. Methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) is particularly prevalent in patients with healthcare-associated risk factors such as hemodialysis, IV drug use, recent surgery, or indwelling catheters. While E. coli and Pseudomonas can occur, and Candida in immunocompromised hosts, S. aureus remains the dominant pathogen, especially in the context of healthcare exposure. Mycobacterium tuberculosis typically presents with a more chronic course.

Question 3

A 70-year-old male with a known C6-C7 spinal epidural abscess presents with acute urinary retention and rapidly progressive weakness in his lower extremities (motor strength 2/5). He has been on intravenous antibiotics for 48 hours without clinical improvement. What is the most appropriate next step?





Explanation

Urgent surgical decompression is indicated for spinal epidural abscesses with progressive neurological deficits (such as new-onset urinary retention, rapidly worsening weakness) or failure of appropriate medical management to prevent irreversible neurological damage. Continuing antibiotics alone is insufficient. Adding rifampin may be part of an antibiotic strategy but does not address acute mechanical compression. Percutaneous aspiration may be considered for diagnosis or small, stable collections but not for acute, progressive deficits with neurological compromise. Steroids are generally contraindicated as they can mask symptoms, impair host immunity in bacterial infections, and are not a definitive treatment for pus collection.

Question 4

On MRI, a spinal epidural abscess typically appears as what on T2-weighted images?





Explanation

Spinal epidural abscesses typically appear hyperintense on T2-weighted images due to the high fluid content of pus. They are often surrounded by a peripheral hypointense rim (representing granulation tissue or inflammatory changes) that shows significant enhancement after gadolinium administration. Homogenously hypointense or isointense to CSF are incorrect. Hyperintense without significant contrast enhancement would be atypical for an active abscess, which typically enhances due to inflammation and vascularity of the capsule.

Question 5

Which of the following conditions is LEAST likely to mimic a spinal epidural abscess on initial presentation, considering its typical clinical picture?





Explanation

A spinal epidural abscess (SEA) commonly presents with back pain, fever, and neurological deficits. Acute disc herniation, spinal cord tumors, and transverse myelitis can all present with similar neurological deficits and pain, making them strong mimics. Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS) can cause rapidly ascending paralysis, mimicking severe neurological compromise, though fever, focal spinal pain, and a distinct sensory level are less typical for GBS, which presents with areflexia. A simple osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture, while causing back pain, typically does not present with fever or progressive neurological deficits unless there's associated cord compression from retropulsion or epidural hematoma, which would be atypical for the initial presentation of an uncomplicated osteoporotic fracture. Thus, a simple compression fracture is the least likely to mimic the full clinical picture of an SEA.

Question 6

A 3-year-old child presents with refusal to walk, irritability, and low-grade fever for 3 days. Physical examination reveals tenderness to palpation over the lumbar spine and a limping gait. Inflammatory markers are elevated. The most common site for a spinal infection in this age group is:





Explanation

In young children, discitis (inflammation or infection of the intervertebral disc space) is more common than true epidural abscess, although they can coexist or discitis can progress to an abscess. The lumbar spine is the most frequently affected region. Symptoms like refusal to walk, irritability, and a limping gait are classic presentations in this age group.

Question 7

What is the typical recommended duration of intravenous antibiotic therapy for an uncomplicated pyogenic spinal epidural abscess managed non-surgically, assuming cultures are positive for a sensitive organism?





Explanation

For pyogenic spinal epidural abscesses (SEA), especially those managed non-surgically or those that have undergone successful debridement, a prolonged course of antibiotics is crucial to prevent recurrence and ensure eradication. A typical duration is 6-8 weeks of intravenous antibiotics, often followed by a transition to oral antibiotics for a similar duration, or sometimes 8-12 weeks total with IV transitioning to oral. The total duration depends on the pathogen, host factors, and resolution of inflammatory markers, but 6-8 weeks IV is a standard starting point for uncomplicated cases. 2-4 weeks is generally too short for eradication of established spinal infection, while 3-6 months is more typical for complicated osteomyelitis or prosthetic joint infections.

Question 8

A 45-year-old male presents with right flank pain, limping, and an inability to fully extend his right hip. He has a history of Crohn's disease. On examination, he has tenderness in the right iliac fossa and a positive psoas sign. What is the most appropriate imaging study to confirm the diagnosis and assess for a potential spinal origin?





Explanation

While CT abdomen/pelvis with IV contrast is excellent for visualizing psoas abscesses, MRI of the lumbar spine and pelvis with contrast offers superior soft tissue resolution, allowing for better identification of the primary source (e.g., discitis, vertebral osteomyelitis), the extent of the abscess, and any intraspinal involvement. Given that psoas abscesses can often originate from spinal infections (or in Crohn's disease, directly from the bowel), MRI provides a more comprehensive assessment of both spinal and psoas pathology. The psoas sign is classic for psoas irritation/abscess.

Question 9

A patient from an endemic area presents with chronic back pain, night sweats, and weight loss. Imaging reveals destruction of multiple contiguous vertebral bodies with associated large paraspinal abscesses and severe kyphotic deformity. Which pathogen is most likely responsible?





Explanation

This clinical presentation, including chronic symptoms, systemic signs (night sweats, weight loss), destruction of multiple contiguous vertebral bodies (often with relative disc sparing initially but progressing to disc and multiple levels), large paraspinal 'cold' abscesses, and progressive kyphotic deformity (Pott's kyphosis), is classic for spinal tuberculosis (Pott's disease). It is more common in endemic areas and immunocompromised individuals. The other pathogens typically cause pyogenic infections with a more acute course.

Question 10

Which of the following criteria would NOT typically favor non-operative management of a spinal epidural abscess?





Explanation

Progressive neurological deficit, especially despite appropriate antibiotic therapy, is a strong absolute indication for urgent surgical decompression of a spinal epidural abscess. This represents failure of medical management and an increasing threat of irreversible neurological damage. The other options (no or minimal neurological deficit, small abscess, responsive infection, and severe comorbidities precluding surgery) are factors that would favor an attempt at non-operative management with close monitoring.

Question 11

A patient with a suspected L3-L4 discitis and adjacent vertebral osteomyelitis has negative blood cultures. What is the most appropriate next step for definitive diagnosis?





Explanation

When blood cultures are negative in suspected spinal infection (discitis/osteomyelitis), obtaining tissue for culture and histology is paramount for definitive diagnosis and targeted antibiotic therapy. A CT-guided biopsy of the affected disc space and/or vertebral body is the most appropriate and minimally invasive method to achieve this. Empiric antibiotics without pathogen identification can delay effective treatment and obscure future culture results. Lumbar puncture is for CSF analysis. PET scan helps localize infection but does not provide microbial diagnosis.

Question 12

A 55-year-old male undergoes a lumbar fusion for degenerative spondylolisthesis. On post-operative day 7, he develops fever, increasing back pain, and purulent drainage from the surgical incision. Which of the following is the most likely pathogen?





Explanation

Staphylococcus aureus, including MRSA, is the most common cause of acute surgical site infections (SSI) in orthopedic spine surgery, often manifesting within the first week post-op with fever, pain, and wound drainage. Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus and Propionibacterium acnes are more commonly associated with delayed or chronic hardware-related infections. Enterococcus and Candida can occur but are less frequent than S. aureus in acute SSI.

Question 13

Which of the following statements regarding the pathophysiology of spinal epidural abscess is INCORRECT?





Explanation

The statement 'The posterior epidural space is more commonly involved than the anterior epidural space in pyogenic spinal epidural abscesses' is incorrect. Most pyogenic spinal epidural abscesses originate from vertebral body osteomyelitis or discitis (which spread anteriorly) or via hematogenous spread to Batson's plexus (primarily anterior). Therefore, the anterior epidural space is actually more frequently involved in pyogenic SEA, especially in the lumbar region. The other statements are generally considered correct.

Question 14

Which of the following is a recognized complication specifically associated with anterior surgical approaches for cervical spinal epidural abscesses?





Explanation

Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy leading to hoarseness or dysphonia is a well-known complication unique to anterior cervical approaches due to the nerve's anatomical course. While superficial wound infection, dural tear, persistent neurological deficit, and deep vein thrombosis can occur with any spinal surgery (or general surgery), recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy is specific to anterior cervical access.

Question 15

A 50-year-old IV drug user presents with fever, severe T12 back pain, and new-onset paraparesis. Pending blood cultures and biopsy results, what is the most appropriate empiric intravenous antibiotic regimen?





Explanation

In a patient with risk factors for both MRSA (IV drug user) and Gram-negative bacteria (potentially via hematogenous spread or urinary source), empiric broad-spectrum coverage is essential. Vancomycin provides excellent coverage against MRSA, while a third-generation cephalosporin like Ceftriaxone provides good coverage against Gram-negative organisms, making this a common and appropriate empiric combination. Ciprofloxacin and Rifampin would be used for specific organisms (e.g., Cipro for Pseudomonas, Rifampin in combo for S. aureus after susceptibility). Penicillin G is too narrow. Doxycycline/Metronidazole targets anaerobic and atypical bacteria. Fluconazole/Amphotericin B are for fungal infections.

Question 16

Which feature is more characteristic of pyogenic spinal osteomyelitis/abscess compared to tuberculous spondylitis (Pott's disease)?





Explanation

Pyogenic spinal osteomyelitis and abscesses typically have a more acute or subacute onset with rapid progression of symptoms (days to weeks), including fever, severe pain, and rapid neurological decline. Tuberculous spondylitis (Pott's disease) is characterized by a more indolent, chronic course (months to years), often with gradual onset of pain, constitutional symptoms (weight loss, night sweats), and slow development of kyphosis or neurological deficit. The other options are more characteristic of tuberculous spondylitis.

Question 17

A patient with a C2 epidural abscess presents with myelopathy. Given the location, what is a critical consideration during surgical planning that might differ from a lumbar abscess?





Explanation

Cervical spinal epidural abscesses, particularly at high cervical levels (C1-C4), pose a higher risk of brainstem involvement, respiratory compromise, and aspiration due to proximity to pharyngeal structures and vital respiratory centers. This necessitates careful airway management pre- and intraoperatively. While awake intubation may be considered in certain unstable cervical spine cases, it's not universally required. Hardware removal is dependent on the infection's relation to hardware, not purely location. Cardiac stress tests are general preoperative assessments. Non-operative management threshold is generally similar unless the patient is extremely frail and non-operative is the only option.

Question 18

In the management of spinal epidural abscess, what is the primary role of serial erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) measurements?





Explanation

ESR and CRP are inflammatory markers that are typically elevated in spinal infections. Their primary role in management is to monitor the response to antibiotic therapy and help guide the duration of treatment. A sustained decrease in these markers, often normalizing, indicates successful infection control and helps determine when to transition from IV to oral antibiotics and when to cease treatment. They are non-specific and do not confirm diagnosis, identify pathogens, assess cord compression directly, or screen for asymptomatic carriers.

Question 19

A patient's blood cultures come back positive for Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) from a confirmed spinal epidural abscess. The patient has no known allergies. Which antibiotic would be the most appropriate first-line targeted therapy?





Explanation

Vancomycin is the cornerstone of treatment for MRSA infections, including spinal epidural abscesses, due to its reliable activity against methicillin-resistant strains. Ceftriaxone and Piperacillin-tazobactam lack MRSA coverage. Ciprofloxacin has some activity against S. aureus but is generally not preferred as first-line monotherapy for serious MRSA infections. Daptomycin is an alternative for MRSA, particularly in cases of vancomycin failure, intolerance, or in specific clinical scenarios, but vancomycin is typically first-line due to its established efficacy and cost-effectiveness.

Question 20

A child with a history of successfully treated lumbar discitis at age 5 presents at age 12 with progressive scoliotic deformity. Which of the following is the most likely cause of this deformity?





Explanation

Spinal infections in children, such as discitis and osteomyelitis, can cause damage to the vertebral endplates and growth plates, leading to growth disturbances. This can result in progressive kyphosis, scoliosis, or a combination (kyphoscoliosis) as the child grows, years after the initial infection. This is a well-recognized late complication. While other causes of scoliosis exist, the history of childhood discitis makes this the most direct and likely etiology.

Question 21

A 60-year-old diabetic patient with a chronic foot ulcer develops severe thoracolumbar back pain, fever, and progressive myelopathy over 3 days. MRI confirms a large T11-L1 epidural abscess with significant cord compression. What is the most appropriate immediate management?





Explanation

This patient presents with rapidly progressive myelopathy and significant cord compression secondary to a large epidural abscess, which is an absolute indication for urgent surgical decompression and debridement. Diabetes and chronic ulcers are risk factors for spinal infection, often polymicrobial. Oral antibiotics alone are insufficient and dangerous. Percutaneous aspiration might be considered for stable patients without neurological deficits, but not in this acute setting with cord compression. Steroids are generally contraindicated as they can worsen bacterial infections and do not remove the compressive pus. Physical therapy is not an immediate treatment for active infection and neurological compromise.

Question 22

An immunocompromised patient develops subacute low back pain, fever, and constitutional symptoms. MRI shows L4-L5 discitis and osteomyelitis with a paravertebral abscess. Blood cultures are negative, but a tissue biopsy reveals fungal elements. What is the most likely causative organism?





Explanation

In immunocompromised patients, especially those with prolonged antibiotic use, central lines, or malignancy, fungal infections (e.g., Candida spp., Aspergillus spp.) of the spine should be considered. Candida spp. are among the most common causes of fungal spinal infections in this population. The presence of fungal elements on biopsy confirms a fungal etiology. The other options are bacterial (A, B, E) or mycobacterial (D).

Question 23

A patient with a prior lumbar fusion 6 months ago presents with worsening back pain, fever, and elevated inflammatory markers. Imaging suggests a deep surgical site infection involving the fusion hardware. What is the most appropriate initial management approach?





Explanation

In the context of chronic or subacute deep surgical site infection involving spinal instrumentation, hardware removal, thorough debridement, and prolonged intravenous antibiotic therapy are often necessary to eradicate the infection. The biofilm formed on hardware makes antibiotic penetration difficult and typically prevents eradication without removal. Long-term suppressive antibiotics are rarely curative and typically reserved for patients who cannot undergo definitive surgery. Percutaneous aspiration may not be sufficient for extensive hardware-related infection. Observation is inappropriate. Steroids are contraindicated in active bacterial infection.

Question 24

When is CT scan most useful in the diagnosis and management of spinal epidural abscess, compared to MRI?





Explanation

MRI is the gold standard for diagnosing spinal epidural abscess and evaluating soft tissue involvement, cord compression, and discitis. CT is most useful when MRI is contraindicated (e.g., pacemakers, non-MRI compatible metallic implants) or when better bony detail is required, such as assessing vertebral body destruction, stability, or for pre-operative planning of complex bony debridement. It's less sensitive than MRI for early discitis or purely soft tissue collections without significant bony changes. It does not differentiate pathogen types.

Question 25

Which factor is most strongly associated with a poorer neurological outcome in patients with spinal epidural abscess?





Explanation

The most critical prognostic factor for neurological recovery in spinal epidural abscess is the preoperative neurological status. Patients presenting with a complete neurological deficit (e.g., complete paraplegia or quadriplegia) prior to surgery have a significantly worse prognosis for recovery compared to those with partial deficits or no deficits. While age, diabetes, and S. aureus can worsen overall prognosis or increase risk, they are not as strong predictors of neurological recovery as the initial neurological status. Lumbar location is often associated with better outcomes than cervical/thoracic due to larger canal space.

Question 26

Following surgical decompression and debridement of a spinal epidural abscess, what is the most important parameter to monitor for early detection of recurrence or persistent infection?





Explanation

While WBC and inflammatory markers (ESR/CRP) are important for monitoring overall infection resolution, daily neurological examination is paramount post-operatively. Any new or worsening neurological deficit can indicate persistent compression, new abscess formation, or a surgical complication requiring immediate re-evaluation and potentially re-imaging/re-operation. Plain radiographs are not useful for early detection of soft tissue recurrence. Serum creatinine and LFTs are general health markers.

Question 27

A 40-year-old healthy male presents with localized thoracic back pain and low-grade fever. MRI shows a small (5mm x 1cm) thoracic epidural abscess at T8, without cord compression or neurological deficits. Blood cultures are positive for MSSA. What is the most appropriate initial management?





Explanation

For patients with small, localized spinal epidural abscesses, stable neurological status (no deficits), and identified sensitive organisms, a trial of intravenous antibiotics with very close neurological monitoring can be an appropriate initial management strategy. Urgent surgery is reserved for progressive deficits or larger abscesses causing compression. Steroids are contraindicated. Percutaneous drainage can be considered, but initial primary treatment is IV antibiotics. Oral antibiotics are insufficient for initial treatment of a spinal epidural abscess.

Question 28

A 75-year-old female undergoes extensive laminectomy and debridement for a large L3-L4 epidural abscess, with significant destruction of the L3 vertebral body. What is the most significant long-term concern related to spinal stability following this procedure?





Explanation

Extensive laminectomy, especially when combined with significant vertebral body destruction from infection, can severely compromise spinal stability. This often leads to iatrogenic post-laminectomy kyphosis or progressive instability, which may necessitate concurrent or staged spinal fusion and instrumentation to prevent deformity and protect neurological structures. Adjacent segment disease is a concern typically after spinal fusion. Disc herniation and facet arthropathy are degenerative issues. Sacral stress fractures are unrelated.

Question 29

The use of gadolinium contrast in spinal MRI for suspected epidural abscess is primarily to:





Explanation

Gadolinium contrast significantly enhances the margins of the abscess capsule, granulation tissue, and any associated inflammatory changes or osteomyelitis, allowing for better delineation of the extent of the infection and differentiation from surrounding edema or normal tissue. It does not primarily visualize bony anatomy better than non-contrast MRI, reduce scan time, or primarily differentiate CSF from tumor (though it aids in tumor characterization). Spinal cord edema is better seen on T2-weighted sequences.

Question 30

A patient presents with a T12-L1 vertebral osteomyelitis. Which of the following deep tissue collections is most likely to develop as a direct extension from this specific spinal level?





Explanation

The psoas major muscle originates from the T12 to L5 vertebrae and inserts into the lesser trochanter of the femur. Infections (like osteomyelitis) in the thoracolumbar spine, particularly in the lumbar region, can easily track along the psoas muscle sheath, leading to a psoas abscess. Retropharyngeal abscesses are cervical. Subdural empyema is intracranial/intraspinal. Gluteal and ischiorectal abscesses are lower body soft tissue infections less directly related to thoracolumbar spinal infection.

Question 31

Which patient characteristic or finding would suggest a more acute, rapidly progressing spinal epidural abscess rather than a chronic or indolent process?





Explanation

Rapid progression of neurological deficits over a short period (hours to days) is a hallmark of acute, rapidly expanding spinal epidural abscesses and necessitates urgent intervention. The other options (weight loss, night sweats, insidious pain, mildly elevated inflammatory markers, cold abscesses) are more suggestive of a chronic or indolent process, such as tuberculous spondylitis.

Question 32

A patient presents with a rapidly developing C7-T1 epidural abscess. During history taking, she admits to recent illicit intravenous drug use. This history significantly increases the likelihood of which specific microorganism?





Explanation

While S. aureus is the most common pathogen in IV drug users overall, Pseudomonas aeruginosa is disproportionately common in spinal infections, especially osteomyelitis and epidural abscesses, in IV drug users due to contaminated drug paraphernalia and skin flora. Its presence often necessitates specific antibiotic coverage (e.g., Ciprofloxacin, Piperacillin-tazobactam). The cervical and thoracic spine are common sites for Pseudomonas osteomyelitis/abscess in this population.

Question 33

During an urgent laminectomy for a spinal epidural abscess, an incidental dural tear is noted. The dura is repaired primarily. What is the most appropriate post-operative management regarding ambulation and activity?





Explanation

For intraoperative dural tears, especially those repaired primarily, a period of strict bed rest (typically 3-5 days, though guidelines vary from 2-7 days) is usually recommended to allow the dural repair to heal and minimize the risk of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak or pseudomeningocele formation by reducing intracranial and intraspinal CSF pressure. Immediate or early mobilization increases CSF pressure and the risk of failure of the repair. Lumbar drains are used for persistent leaks or larger tears, not routinely for all primary repairs.

Question 34

A patient treated successfully for a lumbar epidural abscess 6 months ago now presents with recurrent back pain, fever, and new neurological symptoms. What is the most critical initial diagnostic step?





Explanation

Given the recurrent symptoms (back pain, fever, new neurological deficits) and history of spinal abscess, the most critical initial diagnostic step is a repeat MRI of the lumbar spine with gadolinium to definitively assess for a recurrent abscess or osteomyelitis. While inflammatory markers, antibiotics, and ID consultation are important, they follow the definitive imaging diagnosis. Lumbar puncture is generally avoided in suspected epidural abscess.

Question 35

When managing a patient with vertebral osteomyelitis and epidural abscess, which imaging finding on plain radiographs or CT scan raises the greatest concern for spinal instability requiring surgical stabilization?





Explanation

Significant destruction of a vertebral body (typically >50% height loss or involvement of multiple spinal columns: anterior, middle, posterior) is a major concern for spinal instability, especially in the context of infection where bone quality is compromised. This degree of destruction may lead to progressive kyphosis or translation, necessitating surgical stabilization in addition to decompression and debridement. Endplate erosion, disc narrowing, pedicle sclerosis, and soft tissue swelling do not inherently indicate instability to the same degree.

Question 36

A 60-year-old male with a thoracic epidural abscess is noted to have a new-onset motor deficit (4/5 strength in bilateral lower extremities) on morning rounds. He is scheduled for surgery in 6 hours. What is the appropriate action?





Explanation

An acute decline in neurological function (e.g., new motor deficit) in a patient with a spinal epidural abscess mandates expediting surgical decompression to the earliest possible time, ideally immediately. Every hour of delay in decompression for acute neurological compromise can lead to irreversible neurological damage. Delaying for comorbidities or administering steroids are inappropriate. Repeat MRI might delay definitive treatment further and is usually not necessary for an acute decline in a known abscess.

Question 37

Percutaneous drainage of a spinal epidural abscess may be considered in which of the following scenarios?





Explanation

Percutaneous drainage can be an option for small, well-circumscribed, accessible spinal epidural abscesses in hemodynamically stable patients who do not have neurological deficits or rapidly progressive symptoms. It may also be used for diagnostic purposes. It is generally not suitable for rapidly progressive deficits, large multiloculated abscesses, those with significant cord compression, or spinal instability, which typically require open surgical debridement. Failed medical management with sepsis is also a strong indication for open surgery.

Question 38

When should a follow-up MRI be considered after successful surgical decompression and several weeks of antibiotic therapy for a spinal epidural abscess?





Explanation

A follow-up MRI, typically after a significant course of antibiotics (e.g., 6-8 weeks) or upon completion of antibiotic therapy, is often recommended to confirm the resolution of the abscess, assess for any residual collections, and evaluate for spinal stability, especially if there was significant bony destruction. This helps guide further management and confirm treatment success. Waiting for symptom recurrence is reactive, and routine imaging at a fixed time without clinical rationale is less evidence-based.

Question 39

Which class of antibiotics generally has poor penetration into the central nervous system and epidural space, making it less ideal as a primary monotherapy treatment for spinal epidural abscess?





Explanation

Aminoglycosides (e.g., Gentamicin) generally have poor penetration into the central nervous system and epidural space. While they might be used in combination therapy for specific gram-negative organisms, they are not ideal as primary monotherapy agents for SEA due to this limited penetration and potential for nephrotoxicity and ototoxicity. Fluoroquinolones, beta-lactams, and rifamycins typically have better CNS penetration. Vancomycin's penetration is variable but it is still the primary choice for MRSA due to its efficacy and lack of superior alternatives for MRSA.

Question 40

A patient on chronic immunosuppression for rheumatoid arthritis develops new onset back pain, fevers, and neurological deficits. An MRI confirms a spinal epidural abscess. What additional diagnostic step should be considered, beyond routine bacterial cultures?





Explanation

In immunocompromised patients, the risk of atypical organisms, particularly fungal pathogens (e.g., Candida, Aspergillus), is significantly increased. Therefore, fungal cultures (blood, tissue) and serology should be considered in the diagnostic workup in addition to routine bacterial cultures. While HIV testing might be relevant as a general health screen in some immunocompromised patients, it is not directly about identifying the abscess's microbiology in this context. Genetic testing or toxicology screens are less immediately relevant to identifying the pathogen of the current infection. Repeat blood cultures are routine but will not detect fungal organisms.

Question 41

For a large anterior thoracic epidural abscess causing severe cord compression from T6 to T8, which surgical approach is generally favored for decompression and debridement?





Explanation

Anterior thoracic epidural abscesses causing significant cord compression require an anterior approach for direct decompression and debridement of the anterior pathology. A costotransversectomy or a formal transthoracic approach (thoracotomy) allows direct access to the anterior epidural space and vertebral bodies in the thoracic spine. Posterior laminectomy alone is contraindicated for anterior compression as it can worsen kyphosis and not adequately decompress the anterior cord. Transpedicular approaches are less extensive and may not provide sufficient decompression for large, multi-level anterior collections. Lumbar drain is for CSF leaks. Anterior cervical approach is for the cervical spine.

Question 42

A 45-year-old male presents to the emergency department with severe, new-onset back pain, subjective fevers, and a history of recent staphylococcal bacteremia. Physical exam is unremarkable for neurological deficit. What is the most appropriate next step?





Explanation

The combination of severe back pain, fevers, and recent staphylococcal bacteremia is highly suggestive of spinal infection (e.g., discitis, osteomyelitis, or epidural abscess) even in the absence of neurological deficits. An urgent MRI of the spine with contrast is the gold standard for diagnosis and is crucial to detect an abscess early before neurological compromise occurs. Plain radiographs are insensitive for early spinal infection. Lumbar puncture is generally avoided in suspected epidural abscess. Discharge is dangerous. While admission for IV antibiotics is appropriate, it should follow, or be initiated concurrently with, the definitive imaging diagnosis.

Question 43

A patient who works with livestock develops chronic low back pain, fevers, and sacroiliitis on imaging. Blood cultures are negative for common bacteria. What should be considered in the differential diagnosis for a spinal infection?





Explanation

Brucellosis is a zoonotic infection, often acquired through contact with infected animals or contaminated dairy products. It commonly causes spondylitis, discitis, and sacroiliitis, often with chronic back pain and systemic symptoms. It should be strongly considered in patients with appropriate epidemiological exposure when routine bacterial cultures are negative. The other options are less likely given the specific history.

Question 44

In the context of surgical management of a spinal epidural abscess with associated extensive vertebral osteomyelitis, when is spinal fusion indicated?





Explanation

Spinal fusion is indicated in the surgical management of spinal infections if there is significant bony destruction (e.g., >50% vertebral body collapse, severe kyphosis), multi-level involvement, or iatrogenic destabilization from decompression (e.g., extensive laminectomy) that results in mechanical instability or a high risk of progressive deformity. Fusion is necessary to restore spinal alignment and stability after debridement. It is not always indicated, not for improving antibiotic penetration, and not solely for chronic pain (though pain can be a symptom of instability).

Question 45

Which of the following is the most effective measure to prevent surgical site infection in elective spine surgery?





Explanation

Meticulous pre-operative skin preparation with an antiseptic solution like chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) is a highly effective and evidence-based measure to reduce the bacterial load on the skin and significantly lower the risk of surgical site infections. Routine prolonged post-operative antibiotics are not recommended due to increased risk of antibiotic resistance and lack of proven benefit beyond 24 hours (or shorter). Pulsatile lavage efficacy is debatable. Wound drains do not prevent infection and can sometimes be a source. Topical antibiotics have limited evidence for routine use and can contribute to resistance.

Question 46

When assessing a patient with suspected spinal epidural abscess, which component of the neurological examination is MOST crucial for rapidly identifying an evolving spinal cord compression?





Explanation

Identifying a distinct sensory level to pinprick or light touch is often the most critical and earliest sign of an evolving spinal cord compression from an epidural abscess. It helps localize the level of pathology and indicates a transverse lesion of the spinal cord. While other elements are important, a clear sensory level is highly indicative of a serious and potentially rapidly progressing problem requiring urgent attention. Cranial nerve function is usually unaffected in spinal cord compression.

Question 47

A patient presents with subacute back pain, progressive leg weakness, and bladder dysfunction. MRI reveals an enhancing mass in the epidural space. While an abscess is suspected, what other major differential diagnosis must be ruled out?





Explanation

Spinal epidural tumors, whether primary (e.g., schwannoma, meningioma, ependymoma) or metastatic, can present with very similar symptoms to a spinal epidural abscess, including back pain, progressive neurological deficits, and an enhancing mass in the epidural space on MRI. Differentiating between the two often requires biopsy, though clinical context (fever, inflammatory markers, constitutional symptoms, risk factors) can favor one over the other. The other options are less likely to present as an enhancing epidural mass with these specific symptoms.

Question 48

Which of the following factors is most strongly associated with increased mortality in patients with spinal epidural abscess?





Explanation

The presence of concurrent endocarditis, active bacteremia, or systemic sepsis (e.g., septic shock, multiorgan failure) is a major predictor of increased mortality in patients with spinal epidural abscess, reflecting a more severe and widespread systemic infection. While cervical location can be associated with worse neurological outcomes, and age can impact overall prognosis, systemic sepsis is a direct and immediate threat to life. S. epidermidis is less virulent than S. aureus. Previous spine surgery is a risk factor for developing SEA but not a direct mortality predictor to the same extent as systemic sepsis.

Question 49

After 4 weeks of appropriate intravenous antibiotic therapy for a stable, culture-proven spinal epidural abscess, a patient's inflammatory markers (ESR, CRP) have normalized, and they are neurologically intact. What is the most appropriate next step regarding antibiotics?





Explanation

Once clinical improvement is evident, inflammatory markers normalize, and the patient is stable and neurologically intact after an adequate initial IV course (typically 2-4 weeks or longer for complex cases), it is appropriate to transition from intravenous to highly bioavailable oral antibiotics. The total duration of antibiotic therapy for spinal epidural abscess is typically 6-12 weeks, with the oral component ensuring eradication. Discontinuing all antibiotics is too early, and continuing IV for longer without specific indication is not optimal. Switching IV antibiotics is only indicated for treatment failure or resistance. Repeating MRI before transition might be considered but is not universally mandatory if clinical and lab parameters are excellent.

Question 50

A patient undergoes successful surgical and antibiotic treatment for a lumbar epidural abscess. Six months later, he presents with a new epidural abscess at a different lumbar level. What should be strongly investigated as an underlying cause?





Explanation

Recurrence of a spinal epidural abscess at a different level, especially after seemingly successful initial treatment, strongly suggests an ongoing or persistent distant infectious focus that is hematogenously seeding the spine. Common sources include endocarditis, skin infections, urinary tract infections, or deep-seated abscesses elsewhere that were not identified or adequately treated during the initial workup. While diabetes is a risk factor, an undiagnosed condition would not explain a recurrent abscess at a new site. Inadequate antibiotic duration typically leads to recurrence at the same site or persistent infection. Poor surgical technique is less likely for a new site. Trauma is less likely to cause a spontaneous recurrent abscess.

Question 51

Which of the following describes the typical MRI appearance of discitis?





Explanation

Discitis typically presents on MRI with T1 hypointense and T2 hyperintense signal within the disc space, indicating increased fluid and inflammation. This is often accompanied by indistinct or irregular vertebral endplates and enhancement of both the disc and adjacent vertebral bodies after gadolinium administration, reflecting active infection and inflammation. Normal disc signal or sharp endplate margins would argue against active discitis. Diffuse vertebral body enhancement without disc involvement would be more typical of osteomyelitis without discitis, or other conditions.

Question 52

A patient with a known spinal epidural abscess at L4-L5 presents with fever and progressive lower extremity weakness. Blood cultures are negative. What is the most critical next step?





Explanation

The most critical factor here is the 'progressive lower extremity weakness,' indicating neurological deterioration due to cord or cauda equina compression. This necessitates urgent surgical decompression and debridement to prevent irreversible neurological damage, regardless of culture results. While obtaining cultures and starting antibiotics are generally important, the immediate priority in the face of neurological decline is mechanical decompression. A CT-guided biopsy would delay definitive treatment for a known abscess with progressive symptoms.

Question 53

What is the primary mechanism by which spinal epidural abscesses lead to neurological deficits?





Explanation

The primary mechanism by which spinal epidural abscesses cause neurological deficits is direct mechanical compression of the spinal cord or cauda equina, often compounded by ischemia due to compromise of the vascular supply (e.g., radicular arteries, anterior spinal artery) by the expanding abscess and surrounding inflammation. While bacterial toxins may contribute to inflammation, they are not the main cause of acute mechanical deficit. Direct neural invasion or demyelination are not primary mechanisms of typical pyogenic SEA.

Question 54

A 70-year-old patient with rheumatoid arthritis on immunosuppressive therapy develops a cervical epidural abscess. The causative organism is identified as Aspergillus fumigatus. What is the most appropriate long-term management strategy?





Explanation

Fungal spinal infections, particularly in immunocompromised patients, are notoriously difficult to treat. Management typically involves aggressive surgical debridement of infected tissue and bone, along with prolonged courses (often several months to a year) of systemic antifungal therapy (e.g., voriconazole, amphotericin B). Oral antibiotics are ineffective for fungal infections. Surgical fusion might be part of stabilization if needed, but not without decompression and debridement. Discontinuation of medications or short-course steroids are inappropriate and potentially harmful.

Question 55

Which factor is most likely to predispose a patient to developing a spinal epidural abscess via direct extension?





Explanation

Vertebral osteomyelitis is the most common predisposing factor for spinal epidural abscess via direct extension, where the infection erodes through the vertebral body and into the epidural space. Intravenous drug use, recent dental procedures, untreated urinary tract infections, and remote skin boils are all common sources of hematogenous spread of infection to the spine and epidural space, but not direct extension.

Question 56

What is the primary concern when performing a lumbar puncture in a patient with suspected spinal epidural abscess?





Explanation

The primary concern when performing a lumbar puncture in a patient with suspected spinal epidural abscess is the risk of iatrogenic neurological deterioration. If there is significant mass effect from the abscess, a lumbar puncture can alter pressure gradients, potentially leading to upward or downward herniation of the spinal cord or cerebellum, or worsening neurological deficits. While introducing new infection is a general risk for any invasive procedure, and CSF findings can be misleading, acute neurological compromise is the most critical and specific contraindication.

Question 57

A patient with a lumbar epidural abscess has positive blood cultures for Gram-negative rods (later identified as E. coli). What empiric antibiotic component would typically be most appropriate to add to Vancomycin to cover this pathogen?





Explanation

For empiric coverage of Gram-negative rods like E. coli in a spinal epidural abscess, a broad-spectrum Gram-negative agent is needed. Ceftriaxone (a third-generation cephalosporin) is an excellent choice for its activity against common Gram-negative enteric bacteria and good CNS penetration. Penicillin G, Clindamycin, and Linezolid lack sufficient Gram-negative coverage. Doxycycline has some Gram-negative activity but is not typically first-line for serious E. coli infections.

Question 58

A 55-year-old male with a history of chronic alcoholism and liver cirrhosis presents with several weeks of progressive back pain and fever. MRI shows diffuse L2 vertebral osteomyelitis. What organism should be particularly considered in this patient population?





Explanation

Patients with chronic alcoholism and liver cirrhosis are often immunocompromised and are at increased risk for infections with Gram-negative organisms, particularly Klebsiella pneumoniae, which can cause severe infections including vertebral osteomyelitis. While S. aureus is the most common cause overall, specific host factors broaden the differential for causative organisms. M. avium complex is seen in advanced HIV. S. pneumoniae is less common in vertebral osteomyelitis. Coagulase-negative Staph is usually associated with hardware or indolent infections.

Question 59

In an anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) for cervical epidural abscess, what is the primary goal of the interbody graft or cage placement?





Explanation

After debridement of infected disc and bone in an ACDF for cervical epidural abscess, an interbody graft or cage (often packed with autograft/allograft or sometimes antibiotic-impregnated material) is placed to provide immediate mechanical stability to the decompressed segment and restore cervical lordosis/alignment. This helps prevent kyphotic deformity and further neural compression. While local antibiotics might be used, the primary biomechanical role is stabilization. It does not primarily prevent dural tears or solely reduce pain, and is not necessarily to facilitate a later posterior fusion unless indicated.

Question 60

What is the typical inflammatory cell profile found in the CSF of a patient with a bacterial spinal epidural abscess (if a lumbar puncture were safely performed)?





Explanation

If a lumbar puncture were safely performed in a patient with a bacterial spinal epidural abscess (which is usually avoided), the CSF findings would typically show a neutrophilic pleocytosis (increased white blood cells, predominantly neutrophils) and elevated protein levels due to inflammation and leakage of plasma proteins into the CSF. Glucose levels are typically normal or mildly reduced, but usually not as profoundly low as seen in bacterial meningitis, as the infection is primarily epidural rather than leptomeningeal. Lymphocytic or eosinophilic pleocytosis are atypical for pyogenic bacterial SEA. Acellular CSF would be normal.

Question 61

A patient is undergoing surgical decompression for a L1-L2 epidural abscess. During surgery, significant purulent material is evacuated. What is the most appropriate next step in terms of surgical closure and drains?





Explanation

After evacuating purulent material from a spinal epidural abscess, placement of a closed suction drain (e.g., Jackson-Pratt) is generally recommended prior to closure. This helps to evacuate any residual pus, serum, or blood, reducing dead space and minimizing the risk of hematoma or seroma formation, which can act as a nidus for recurrent infection. Primary closure without a drain, packing the wound open, or using a Penrose drain are less ideal for a deep spinal wound with a significant infection burden. Irrigation alone may not be sufficient for continued drainage.

Dr. Mohammed Hutaif
Medically Verified Content by
Prof. Dr. Mohammed Hutaif
Consultant Orthopedic & Spine Surgeon
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