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Management of CVJ tuberculosis: the changing paradigm
by
Mohindra Sandeep
, Tripathi Manjul
, Shaurya, Mahendru
, Mohindra Satyawati
, Batish Aman
in
Brain injury
/ Disability
/ Disease management
/ Fractures
/ Hypoxia
/ Immobilization
/ Neurological complications
/ Patients
/ Surgery
/ Tuberculosis
2020
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Management of CVJ tuberculosis: the changing paradigm
by
Mohindra Sandeep
, Tripathi Manjul
, Shaurya, Mahendru
, Mohindra Satyawati
, Batish Aman
in
Brain injury
/ Disability
/ Disease management
/ Fractures
/ Hypoxia
/ Immobilization
/ Neurological complications
/ Patients
/ Surgery
/ Tuberculosis
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Management of CVJ tuberculosis: the changing paradigm
by
Mohindra Sandeep
, Tripathi Manjul
, Shaurya, Mahendru
, Mohindra Satyawati
, Batish Aman
in
Brain injury
/ Disability
/ Disease management
/ Fractures
/ Hypoxia
/ Immobilization
/ Neurological complications
/ Patients
/ Surgery
/ Tuberculosis
2020
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Journal Article
Management of CVJ tuberculosis: the changing paradigm
2020
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Overview
BackgroundThe literature seems fractured for the management of craniovertebral junction (CVJ)-tuberculosis (TB). Presently, non-surgical management has been in vogue for neurologically intact patients. On the contrary, severely disabled cases of CVJ-TB continue to attract discussion, tilted towards surgical intervention. We present our experience with the non-surgical management of CVJ-TB tailored to their neurological status.MethodsAuthors managed 37 cases (2004–2019; age 1–57 years, mean 36 years) of CVJ-TB, of which eighteen (18/37, 48.6%) were severely disabled (Nurick grade ≥ 3) with a mean follow-up of 84 months (48–192 months). Irrespective of the clinical status and radiological findings, all patients were managed on medical management only. Needle aspiration established pathology in 23 (62.2%) cases, while 9 (24.3%) cases required drainage of an abscess. All patients received 18 months of anti-tubercular therapy (ATT). In patients with Nurick grade ≥ 3 and documented AAD, we applied halo vest for 12 months to achieve cervical immobilization. Only hard cervical collar for 3 months was prescribed in patients with no documented AAD.ResultsAll minimally disabled cases (Nurick grade ≤ 2, n = 19) responded favorably (n = 18) to ATT, except for an infant, who succumbed to irreversible hypoxic brain damage due to the obstructed aero-digestive gateway. Of the severely disabled cases (Nurick grade ≥ 3, n = 18), 16 cases had favorable outcomes with only external orthosis (12) and 18-month ATT. One patient succumbed to multiple cerebral infarcts, while one required realignment surgery at CVJ due to fusion in malaligned position.ConclusionThe authors conclude that the disability grading of CVJ-TB is pertinent only for assessing the functional disability of patients at presentation, with minimal relevance in deciding its management strategy. Irrespective of neurological disability, almost all patients respond favorably to external immobilization and ATT.
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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