Discitis

Clinical

Discitis is an inflammatory condition involving the intervertebral discs and end plates of vertebral bodies. It encompasses a spectrum of conditions that includes discitis, spondylodiscitis, and vertebral osteomyelitis.

Discitis is uncommon. However, there is a bimodal peak in children, those under 6 years and adolescents. Neonates can also be affected. Discitis most commonly occurs within the lumbar region, then thoracic and rarely cervical.

How does discitis present in children?

The presentation really depends on the age of the child.

The underlying pathology is usually infectious. A wide range of causative pathogens have been identified. In children, discitis is more likely to be due to haematogenous spread, though pathogens can be introduced directly during surgery or trauma. Discitis has also been reported as a very rare complication of button battery ingestion.

Discitis is often a result of inflammation secondary to a low-grade bacterial infection. Some authors believe that discitis is non-infectious in origin and actually the result of minor trauma. However, this can be difficult to prove, given how often young children bump into things.

Adults and children have different vasculature, and that might explain the different pathology. Vertebral discs vascularize during early childhood, with blood vessels appearing in the vertebral end plates by seven years of age. This allows direct haematogenous spread with the deposition of bacterial emboli within the disc itself. In older children, the subchondral spongy bone is supplied by end arteries. If septic emboli lodge there, they can cause bone infarction with vertebral osteomyelitis and subsequent extension through the endplate into the disc. Younger children tend to develop discitis first, and older children vertebral osteomyelitis.

Which organisms cause discitis?

Pyogenic

Subacute/non-pyogenic:

What investigations should you consider?

Blood tests

Blood cultures

Imaging

Adapted from Alghamdi, A., 2016. Discitis in children. Neurosciences Journal21(3), pp.283-285.

How do you treat discitis in children?

Treatment predominantly focuses on bed rest, analgesia, and, if possible, targeted anti-microbial therapy. If osteomyelitis is identified, it warrants antibiotic treatment (initially IV with subsequent step-down). The use of antibiotics in ‘sterile’ discitis is more controversial as there are case reports of spontaneous resolution. However, most authors recommend broad-spectrum IV antibiotics, adjusted when results are available, for several days. There is no current consensus on duration. This can subsequently be stepped down to oral if there is a good response to immobilisation.

References

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