Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/142161
Título: Espondilodiscite em idade pediátrica – uma doença rara, um diagnóstico difícil
Outros títulos: Spondylodiscitis in pediatric age – a rare disease, a difficult diagnosis
Autor: Nisa, Madalena Meira
Sousa, Jessica
Pimenta, Joana
Antunes, Joaquina
Gomes, Dora
Faria, Cristina
Palavras-chave: osteoarticular infection
pediatrics
spondylodiscitis
Medicine(all)
Data: 16-Mai-2022
Resumo: Introduction and objective: spondylodiscitis is an infection that affects the intervertebral disc and the contiguous vertebrae. It represents two to four % of all osteoarticular infections in pediatric age. The pathogen is identified in about half of the cases, with Staphylococcus aureus being the most frequently isolated. Recent studies show that between six months and four years, Kingella kingae has an important etiological role. The purpose of the presentation of this clinical case was to draw attention to this rare pathology whose diagnosis is difficult and requires a high level of suspicion. Clinical case description: a sixteen-month-old male, with a history of constipation, is brought multiple times to the Pediatric Emergency Department for a clinical picture with more than a month of evolution of persistent irritability, abdominal pain and refusal to walk, with progressive worsening. On the second visit to the Pediatric Emergency Department, he presented dorsolombalgia on palpation of the dorsolumbar spine and decreased lumbar lordosis, which led to the performance of analytical evaluation, urinalysis, renal and bladder ultrasound and dorsolumbar radiography, all without changes. On the third visit to the Pediatric Emergency Department, hospitalization was decided and dorsolumbar nuclear magnetic resonance and bone scintigraphy were requested, revealing spondylodiscitis in D7-D8. Analytical parameters had no changes, except for a slight increase in erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Blood cultures and remaining etiological study negatives. Intravenous therapy with cefuroxime and flucloxacillin was started with progressive improvement of pain. Upon discharge he was asymptomatic and maintained oral flucloxacillin until a total of six weeks of treatment. He was subsequently reassessed and remained asymptomatic, with a physical examination, analytical evaluation and dorsolumbar radiography without changes. Conclusions: spondylodiscitis is an identity that is difficult to diagnose, especially in children, due to its rarity, unspecific clinic, inability for children to verbalize their symptoms and late radiologic signs, requiring a high index of suspicion. The average time between the onset of symptoms and the diagnosis is three weeks to three months. Magnetic resonance imaging is the exam of choice. Blood cultures are often negative. The mainstay of treatment is antibiotic therapy for several weeks, but its choice and duration are controversial. Inappropriate treatment can lead to chronic pain, severe orthopaedic sequelae and devastating neurological complications. When timely and properly treated, most cases have a benign and self-limited clinical course.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/142161
DOI: https://doi.org/10.15448/1980-6108.2022.1.41086
ISSN: 1806-5562
Aparece nas colecções:NMS - Artigos em revista internacional com arbitragem científica

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