Classic history and presentation: The classic triad of a SEA is acute onset of back or neck pain, fever, and neurologic deficits. Neurologic symptoms may include weakness, sensory changes, radiculopathy, and/or bladder and bowel dysfunction, depending on the location and size of the abscess. Having all aspects of the triad is relatively rare (approximately 10% of patients) but very specific. Symptoms may present acutely within hours or days (usually in cases secondary to hematogenous spread or direct inoculation of a pathogen) or can present chronically over weeks to months (usually occurs with spread of contiguous infection).
Prevalence: An estimated 2-8 cases per 10 000 hospital admissions.
- Age – Mean age is 50 years, with the majority of cases occurring between the ages of 30 and 70 years.
- Sex / gender – Incidence may be higher in men according to a few studies.
- Intravenous (IV) drug use
- Alcohol use disorder
- Smoking
- Diabetes mellitus
- Renal insufficiency
- Malignancy
- Immunocompromise
- Concurrent infection
- Recent spinal trauma or injection
Grade / classification system: A 4-stage grading system based on clinical symptoms has been described to assess severity of SEAs:
- Stage 1 – Back pain, fever, tenderness.
- Stage 2 – Radicular pain, nuchal rigidity / stiffness, decreased deep tendon reflexes.
- Stage 3 – Muscle weakness, sensory abnormalities, bladder / bowel dysfunction.
- Stage 4 – Complete paralysis.