Brucellosis is highly contagious zoonotic bacterial disease caused by gram-negative genus. It has a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations and due to variety and nonspecificity of clinical signs the diagnostics can be very complicated. We present a clinical case of severe chronic brucellosis in a 5-years old boy with long-term course of disease and multiorgan involvement. A different complication of brucellosis including severe syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion (SIADH) are discussed. Despite severe course of disease patient achieved significant clinical improvement due to multidisciplinary approach and optimal etiotropic and pathogenetic treatment.
Brucellosis is highly contagious zoonotic bacterial disease caused by gram-negative genus. It has a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations and due to variety and nonspecificity of clinical signs the diagnostics can be very complicated. We present a clinical case of severe chronic brucellosis in a 5-years old boy with long-term course of disease and multiorgan involvement. A different complication of brucellosis including severe syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion (SIADH) are discussed. Despite severe course of disease patient achieved significant clinical improvement due to multidisciplinary approach and optimal etiotropic and pathogenetic treatment.
A report of a rare case of the spinal hydatidosis in a child is presented. Spinal hydatidosis with a total spinal instability caused by the natural history of the disease and inadequate surgical treatment was diagnosed in a 10 year-old girl. At the department the excision of paravertebral and prevertebral hydatid cavernous masses followed by anterior L1–L5 reconstruction and posterior spinal CD-instrumentation was performed. Early post-op results are satisfactory, supporting ability of the spine is restored, that allowed physical and social rehabilitation of the child. Diagnostic pitfalls are identified and discussed.
Objective. To study potentialities of posterior instrumentation for treatment of TB spondylitis in adults. Material and Methods. Data on the treatment outcomes of 93 adult patients with TB spondylitis at T2–L5, which underwent radical reconstructing and restorative surgeries in the period of active inflammatory process were analyzed. In 40 cases a traditional technique was used (Group 1); in 11 cases this technique was supplemented by posterior fixation with Harrington rods or CITO-plates (Group 2) and in 42 – with CDI (Group 3). Deformity dynamics, character of complications, and changes in neural disorders and pain dynamics defined the operative effect. Results. The absence of instrumented fixation in Group 1 was accompanied with the most significant decrease in graft sizes and most numerous complications in a zone of anterior fusion. Both these characteristics have least values in Group 3. Use of conventionally semi-rigid constructs in Group 2 caused 7 complications in a zone of posterior fixation out of 11 cases (66.4 %). There were 2 complications out of 42 cases (4.3 %) in Group 3. Short-term pain intensity decrease was achieved in all groups. However augmenting of pain syndrome was registered in a considerable number of patients in Groups 1 and 2 in a long-term period, while there were no negative long-term outcomes in Group 3. Conclusion. Combination of radical spinal reconstruction and fixation with segmented instrumentation of the third generation for TB spondylitis provides considerable improvement of treatment results and reduction of rehabilitation and in-hospital periods.
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