Introduction
The aim of this study was to review the patients with lumbar epidural abscess in terms of neurological morbidity, therapeutic
outcome, and prognosis, while assessing the usefulness of a new MRI staging classification and specific imaging findings as
indicators for surgical management.
Materials and methods
We reviewed 37 patients who sustained epidural abscess associated with pyogenic spondylodiscitis of the lumbar spine. Ten
patients were treated conservatively, while 27 required urgent or elective surgical drainage. We studied patients with respect
to symptomatology, Frankel-American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) scale evaluation and a new proposed system of MRI staging
of pyogenic spondylodiscitis (stages I–V).
Results
Of the 37 patients with stage IV and V MRI lesions, 13 (35%) had septicemia and 8 (22%) presented with Frankel-ASIA scale
C-D neurological status. All cases with ringlike enhancement on gadolinium-enhanced MRI in the epidural abscess lesions were
treated surgically. Progression of local kyphosis and loss of intervertebral disk height were significantly prevented in the
surgical group (P < 0.05). Improvements of neurological status and laboratory data were better in the surgical group than the conservative
group (P < 0.05), with significantly short hospital stay (P < 0.05).
Discussion
Epidural abscess associated with pyogenic spondylodiscitis presents with various neurological symptoms. In addition to assessment
of progression by clinical symptomatology, modified neurological Frankel-ASIA scaling and the currently proposed MRI staging
regimen may help to consider the timing of surgical intervention. In the acute, subacute or acute-on-chronic phase and the
ringlike enhancement pattern of epidural abscess on gadolinium-enhanced MRI may be an indicator for surgery.
Keywords Epidural abscess - Spondylodiscitis - Lumbar spine - Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) - Surgery