Articles | Volume 1, issue 1
https://doi.org/10.7150/jbji.15884
https://doi.org/10.7150/jbji.15884
Brief report
 | 
14 Jul 2016
Brief report |  | 14 Jul 2016

Tuberculous Spondylitis of the Craniovertebral Junction

Panayiotis D. Megaloikonomos, Vasilios Igoumenou, Thekla Antoniadou, Andreas F. Mavrogenis, and Konstantinos Soultanis

Keywords: Tuberculous Spondylitis, Craniovertebral Junction.

Abstract. Craniovertebral junction tuberculosis is rare, accounting for 0.3 to 1% of all tuberculous spondylitis cases. MR imaging is the modality of choice to detect bone involvement, abscess formation and subligamentous spreading of the pus, to differentiate from other lesions affecting the craniovertebral junction, and to determine the efficacy of treatment. Given the fact that surgical treatment of patients with craniovertebral junction tuberculosis has been associated with a high mortality rate ranging up to 10% and recurrence rate ranging up to 20%, conservative is the standard of treatment for most patients.

This article presents a patient with craniovertebral junction Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection diagnosed with CT-guided biopsy. A halo vest was applied and antituberculous treatment with rifampicin, isoniazid and ethambutol was initiated. At 6-month follow-up, the patient was asymptomatic; CT of the cervical spine showed healing of the bony lesions. The halo vest was removed and physical therapy was recommended. Antituberculous treatment was continued for a total of 18 months, without any evidence of infection recurrence