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- Vinayak Narayan, Nasser Mohammed, Amey R Savardekar, Devi Prasad Patra, and Anil Nanda.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Shreveport, Louisiana, USA.
- World Neurosurg. 2018 Jun 1; 114: 361-367.
IntroductionSpinal tuberculosis (TB) is a common infectious disease prevalent in developing countries and an increasing issue in developed countries. The association of tuberculosis with spondylolisthesis is rarely reported in literature. The aim of our review is to analyze the clinical features and radiologic characteristics of TB spondylolisthesis and to provide a concise update on its surgical management, based on the literature.MethodsA systematic review was performed after conducting a thorough search of the PubMed database. Articles were selected systematically and reviewed completely and relevant data were summarized and discussed.ResultsNineteen articles were selected for the review. The most common clinical manifestation was focal back pain, followed by motor deficit. Most patients had grade 2 listhesis and associated tubercular abscess. The anterior as well as the posterior surgical approach have their own advantages and the choice of approach depends on the location of disease, ease of access, achievement of spinal stability, and avoidance of spread of contiguous infection. Although a posterior approach and fixation using pedicular screws and rods along with debridement of pus or granulation tissue is the favored approach in dorsolumbar TB, an anterior approach, corpectomy, and fusion are preferred in cervical TB.ConclusionsTreatment of TB spondylolisthesis encompasses a wide spectrum of surgical options. However, the mainstay of treatment is chemotherapy. The indications for which surgical management may have an upper hand over medical management are spinal cord compression, significant instability, large tubercular abscess, painful vertebral lesions, kyphosis, and infection by multidrug-resistant TB or extreme drug-resistant TB, when medical management alone does not help. Surgery is effective in these situations by achieving radical debridement, permanent stability, prevention of further neurologic deterioration, and early recovery. Even although conservative management may help in certain cases, a posterior approach, decompression, and fusion are preferred for unstable dorsolumbar disease, whereas an anterior approach is preferred for cervical disease. Combined approaches can be considered in pediatric spinal TB for the correction of kyphotic deformity and its consequent maintenance.Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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