Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

medicine

Acute myelopathy or cauda equina syndrome in HIV-positive adults in a tuberculosis endemic setting: MRI, clinical, and pathologic findings

American Journal of Neuroradiology, Volume 35, No. 8, Year 2014

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Cape Town is the center of an HIV-tuberculosis coepidemic. This study's aim was to highlight the importance and to describe the MR imaging features of tuberculosis in acute myelopathy and cauda equina syndrome in HIV-positive adults. To accomplish this we retrospectively reviewed the MR imaging and clinico-pathologic findings of HIV-positive patients presenting to our hospital with recent onset paraplegia and sphincter dysfunction over a 4-year period, 2008-2011. MATERIALS & METHODS: MR imaging, CD4 count, and CSF analysis and pathology were correlated in 216 cases. RESULTS: Fifty-eight percent (127) of subjects were female. The mean age was 37 years. The median CD4 count was 185 cells/μL. Twenty-five percent (54) of patients were on antiretroviral therapy. MR imaging showed spondylitis in 30% (65). The median CD4 count in these patients was significantly higher than in the remainder. Disk destruction was common and 10% had synchronous spondylitis elsewhere in the spinal column. Thirty percent (64) had features of myelitis/arachnoiditis. Twenty-five percent (55) had no MR imaging abnormality. In 123 (57%) of cases with a definitive etiology on CSF culture or biopsy, 84 (68%) were attributable to tuberculosis including all spondylitis cases and 40% of nonspondylitis cases. Twelve (10%) were due to nontuberculous infection and 12 (10%) had HIV-associated tumors including 2 rare Epstein-Barr-related tumors. CONCLUSIONS: In our setting, acute onset myelopathy/cauda equina syndrome in HIV-positive patients is largely attributable to tuberculosis with nonspondylitic forms being more common than spondylitis and associated with a lower CD4 count.

Statistics
Citations: 35
Authors: 3
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
Research Areas
Health System And Policy
Infectious Diseases
Participants Gender
Female