WordNet
- inflammation of a spinal joint; characterized by pain and stiffness
PrepTutorEJDIC
- 結核(性)の・ゲッカコウ(月下香)(ヒガンバナ科の球根植物)
Wikipedia preview
出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2014/01/08 08:51:39」(JST)
[Wiki en表示]
"Pott's disease" redirects here. It is not to be confused with Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, also known as "POTS".
Pott's Disease |
Classification and external resources |
ICD-10 |
A18.0, M49.0 |
ICD-9 |
015.0 |
MeSH |
D014399 |
Tuberculosis of the spine in an Egyptian mummy
Pott's disease or Pott disease is a presentation of extrapulmonary tuberculosis whereby disease is seen in the spinal vertebrae.[1] Extrapulmonary tuberculosis can affect the spine, a kind of tuberculous arthritis of the intervertebral joints. It is named after Percivall Pott (1714–1788), a British surgeon. The lower thoracic and upper lumbar vertebrae are the areas of the spine most often affected. Scientifically, it is called tuberculous spondylitis and it is most commonly localized in the thoracic portion of the spine. Pott’s disease results from haematogenous spread of tuberculosis from other sites, often pulmonary. The infection then spreads from two adjacent vertebrae into the adjoining intervertebral disc space. If only one vertebra is affected, the disc is normal, but if two are involved, the disc, which is avascular, cannot receive nutrients and collapses. The disc tissue dies and is broken down by caseation, leading to vertebral narrowing and eventually to vertebral collapse and spinal damage. A dry soft tissue mass often forms and superinfection is rare.
Contents
- 1 Signs and symptoms
- 2 Diagnosis
- 3 Late complications
- 4 Prevention
- 5 Therapy
- 6 Cultural references
- 7 References
- 8 External links
Signs and symptoms[edit]
- Back pain
- Fever
- Night sweating
- Anorexia
- Spinal mass, sometimes associated with numbness, paraesthesia, or muscle weakness of the legs
- Difficulty standing
Diagnosis[edit]
- – CBC: leukocytosis
- – Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate: >100 mm/h
- – Tuberculin skin test (purified protein derivative [PPD]) results are positive in 84–95% of patients with Pott disease who are not infected with HIV.
A girl from Oklahoma, who has been affected by bone tuberculosis, 1935
- – Radiographic changes associated with Pott disease present relatively late. The following are radiographic changes characteristic of spinal tuberculosis on plain radiography:
- Lytic destruction of anterior portion of vertebral body
- Increased anterior wedging
- Collapse of vertebral body
- Reactive sclerosis on a progressive lytic process
- Enlarged psoas shadow with or without calcification
- – Additional radiographic findings may include the following:
- Vertebral end plates are osteoporotic.
- Intervertebral disks may be shrunk or destroyed.
- Vertebral bodies show variable degrees of destruction.
- Fusiform paravertebral shadows suggest abscess formation.
- Bone lesions may occur at more than one level.
- Bone scan
- CT of the spine
- Bone biopsy
- MRI
Late complications[edit]
- Vertebral collapse resulting in kyphosis
- Spinal cord compression
- Sinus formation
- Paraplegia (so called Pott's paraplegia)
Prevention[edit]
Controlling the spread of tuberculosis infection can prevent tuberculous spondylitis and arthritis. Patients who have a positive PPD test (but not active tuberculosis) may decrease their risk by properly taking medicines to prevent tuberculosis. To effectively treat tuberculosis, it is crucial that patients take their medications exactly as prescribed.
Therapy[edit]
- Non-operative – antituberculous drugs
- Analgesics
- Immobilization of the spine region different types of braces and collars
- Surgery may be necessary, especially to drain spinal abscesses or debride bony lesions fully or to stabilize the spine. A 2007 review found only just two randomized clinical trial with at least one year-follow up found which compared chemotherapy plus surgery with chemotherapy alone for treating people diagnosed with active tuberculosis of the spine. As such there is no high grade evidence but the results of this study indicates that surgery should not be recommended routinely and clinicians have to selectively judge and decide on which patients to operate. [2]
- Thoracic spinal fusion with or without instrumentation as a last resort
- Physical therapy for pain-relieving modalties, postural education and teaching a home exercise program for strength and flexibility
Cultural references[edit]
- The fictional Hunchback of Notre Dame had a gibbous deformity (humpback) similar to the type caused by tuberculosis.
- In Henrik Ibsen's play "A Doll's House," Dr. Rank suffers from "consumption of the spine."
- Jocelin, the Dean who wanted a spire on his cathedral in William Golding's "The Spire" probably suffered and died as a result of this disease.
- English poets Alexander Pope and William Ernest Henley both suffered from Pott's disease.
- Anna Roosevelt Cowles, sister of president Theodore Roosevelt, suffered from Pott's Disease.
- Chick Webb, swing era drummer and band leader, was afflicted with tuberculosis of the spine as a child, which left him hunchbacked.
- The Sicilian mafia boss Luciano Leggio had Pott's disease and wore a brace.
- Morton, the railroad magnate in Once Upon a Time in the West, suffers from the disease and needs crutches to walk.
- Writer Max Blecher had Pott's Disease.
- Marxist thinker and Communist leader Antonio Gramsci suffered from Pott's disease, probably due to the bad conditions of his incarceration in fascist Italy during the 1930s.
- Italian writer, poet and philosopher Giacomo Leopardi suffered from this disease.
- It features prominently in the book This Is a Soul, which chronicles the work of American physician Rick Hodes in Ethiopia.
- Imogen in the novella "The Princess with the Golden Hair," part of Memoirs of Hecate County by Edmund Wilson (1946) has Pott's disease.
- Jane Addams, social activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner, had Pott's disease.
References[edit]
- ^ "Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis". TB Symptoms. 2013-01-18. Retrieved 2013-07-11.
- ^ Jutte PC, van Loenhout-Rooyackers JH. Routine surgery in addition to chemotherapy for treating spinal tuberculosis. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2006, Issue 1. Art. No.: CD004532. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD004532.pub2. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD004532.pub2/abstract
External links[edit]
- Pott Disease — Tuberculous Spondylitis (medical article with MRI picture), eMedicine .
- "Tuberculous arthritis", MedlinePlus, USA: NIH . Public domain.
- Pott disease
- Pott's Disease of the Thoracic Spine
Actinobacteria (high-G+C) Infectious diseases · Bacterial diseases: G+ (primarily A00–A79, 001–041, 080–109)
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Actinomycineae |
Actinomycetaceae
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Actinomyces israelii (Actinomycosis, Cutaneous actinomycosis) · Tropheryma whipplei (Whipple's disease) · Arcanobacterium haemolyticum (Arcanobacterium haemolyticum infection) · Actinomyces gerencseriae
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Propionibacteriaceae
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Propionibacterium acnes
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Corynebacterineae |
Mycobacteriaceae
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M. tuberculosis/
M. bovis
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Tuberculosis: Ghon focus/Ghon's complex · Pott disease · brain (Meningitis, Rich focus) · Tuberculous lymphadenitis (Tuberculous cervical lymphadenitis) · cutaneous (Scrofuloderma, Erythema induratum, Lupus vulgaris, Prosector's wart, Tuberculosis cutis orificialis, Tuberculous cellulitis, Tuberculous gumma) · Lichen scrofulosorum · Tuberculid (Papulonecrotic tuberculid) · Primary inoculation tuberculosis · Miliary · Tuberculous pericarditis · Urogenital tuberculosis · Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis · Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis
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M. leprae
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Leprosy: Tuberculoid leprosy · Borderline tuberculoid leprosy · Borderline leprosy · Borderline lepromatous leprosy · Lepromatous leprosy · Histoid leprosy
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Nontuberculous
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R1: M. kansasii · M. marinum (Aquarium granuloma)
R2: M. gordonae
R3: M. avium complex/Mycobacterium avium/Mycobacterium intracellulare/MAP (MAI infection) · M. ulcerans (Buruli ulcer) · M. haemophilum
R4/RG: M. fortuitum · M. chelonae · M. abscessus
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Nocardiaceae
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Nocardia asteroides/Nocardia brasiliensis (Nocardiosis) · Rhodococcus equi
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Corynebacteriaceae
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Corynebacterium diphtheriae (Diphtheria) · Corynebacterium minutissimum (Erythrasma) · Corynebacterium jeikeium (Group JK corynebacterium sepsis)
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Bifidobacteriaceae |
Gardnerella vaginalis
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gr+f/gr+a (t)/gr-p (c)/gr-o
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drug (J1p, w, n, m, vacc)
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Dorsopathies/spinal disease (M40–M54, 720–724, 737)
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Deforming dorsopathies |
Spinal curvature |
- Kyphosis
- Lordosis
- Scoliosis
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Other |
- Scheuermann's disease
- Torticollis
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Spondylopathy |
- inflammatory: Spondylitis
- Sacroiliitis
- Discitis
- Spondylodiscitis
- Pott disease
- noninflammatory: Spondylosis
- Spondylolysis
- Spondylolisthesis
- Spinal stenosis
- Facet syndrome
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Back pain |
- Neck pain
- Upper back pain
- Low back pain
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Intervertebral disc disorder |
- Schmorl's nodes
- Degenerative disc disease
- Spinal disc herniation
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noco (arth/defr/back/soft)/cong, sysi/epon, injr
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UpToDate Contents
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English Journal
- Bullmann V, Liljenqvist UR, Koriller M, Lange T.SourceOrthopädische Klinik II - Wirbelsäulenchirurgie, St. Franziskus-Hospital, Schönsteinstr. 63, 50825, Köln-Ehrenfeld, Deutschland, viola.bullmann@st-franziskus-koeln.de.
- Der Orthopade.Orthopade.2012 Aug 24. [Epub ahead of print]
- Tuberculosis of the spine usually occurs with a latency period after primary infection with tuberculosis (TB) and the most frequent agent is Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The rate of TB has increased due to the impact of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and more than 50% of skeletal tuberculo
- PMID 22914915
Japanese Journal
- 脊椎カリエス--その病態と転移性脊椎腫瘍との鑑別点 (特集 炎症など悪性骨・軟部腫瘍と見まちがう疾患--診断のポイント)
- 症例報告 Mycobacterium xenopiによる感染性脊椎炎の1例
Related Links
- tuberculous spondylitis n. A spinal infection associated with tuberculosis and characterized by a sharp angulation of the spine where tubercle lesions are present. Also called Pott's disease.
- Pott disease, also known as tuberculous spondylitis, is one of the oldest demonstrated diseases of humankind, having been documented in spinal remains from the Iron Age in Europe and in ancient mummies from Egypt ...
★リンクテーブル★
[★]
- 英
- spinal tuberculosis, tuberculous spondylitis
- 同
- 脊椎カリエス
- 関
- 脊椎結核、結核
徴候・身体所見
- 局所の重圧感、鈍痛
- 脊柱運動制限 :傍脊柱筋への波及 ← 体幹の不撓性
- 股関節屈曲拘縮:腸腰筋への波及
- Pott麻痺 :病変による脊髄の圧迫により生じる
[★]
- 英
- spinal caries
- 同
- 結核性脊椎炎 tuberculous spondylitis
[★]
- 関
- TB、tuberculosis