The five stages of natural history of tuberculosis of spine have been developed from the clinician's point of view. Management of tuberculosis of spine, in general, it is no different than management of soft tissue tuberculosis, in HIV negative or positive patients. Role of surgery is very limited. Management of tubercular paraplegia, based upon the grading of paraplegia is simple, logical, efficient and easy to understand and remember by any orthopedic surgeon.
Tuberculous involvement of the posterior elements of the spine is uncommon. Review of the literature reveals little information and there is scant mention of this subject in standard textbooks of orthopaedics. A study of 27 cases of such lesions seen over 6 years is presented, drawn from two separate centres, 21 from Central India and 6 from South Eastern Iran. The clinical presentation, investigations and treatment are analysed. A new four point classification is described based upon the site of the lesion, the stage of the lesion, associated lesions and neurological deficit.
Multifocal osteoarticular tuberculosis is uncommonly reported despite its incidence of 7 to 10% in the Indian population. We describe the clinical features and management of 48 patients seen in the last nine years.
Axial traction to correct spinal deformity is a very old concept. The oldest reference available is in ancient Hindu mythological epics (written between 3500 BC and 1800 BC) where it is mentioned how Lord Krishna corrected the hunchback of one of his devotees. Later, Hippocrates (460 BC to 377 BC) described certain devices. Galen (131 AD to 201 AD), a follower of Hippocrates, used axial traction with direct pressure. Ibn Sena (980 AD to 1037 AD) in the Middle East also used similar methods. Osteopaths of Turkey also used axial traction to correct spinal deformities. But gradually mechanical methods for the correction of the spinal deformity went into disrepute due to the invariable production of paraplegia. In the past few decades, interest in the correction of spinal deformity has been rejuvenated due to better understanding of anatomy, physiology, and pathomechanics of spinal deformity. Controlled axial traction has been the keystone of several modern procedures such as Cotrel traction, Halo traction, and Harrington Outrigger instrumentation, etc. It appears that the primitive ways of application of axial traction by crude methods did not totally vanish but have been modified. In Indian tribal areas, bone setters still practice it in modified form.
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