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Spinal Epidural Abscess

Pus collection in the spinal epidural space causing cord compression

ICD-10: G06.1 · systemic condition

A spinal epidural abscess (SEA) is a collection of pus in the epidural space — the fat-filled area between the dura mater and the bony spinal canal. The infection causes cord or cauda equina compression through a combination of direct mass effect and vascular compromise, producing a clinical triad of back pain, fever, and neurological deficits. SEA is a true spinal emergency: time from symptom onset to neurological deterioration can be measured in hours, and delays in diagnosis are the most common cause of permanent paralysis. Staphylococcus aureus (including MRSA) accounts for the majority of cases. Common sources include bacteremia from skin infections, intravenous drug use, urinary tract infections, or iatrogenic causes such as epidural catheters or spinal injections. Diabetes mellitus, immunosuppression, and chronic renal failure are major predisposing conditions. The lumbar spine is most commonly affected, followed by the thoracic and cervical regions. Diagnosis requires urgent MRI with gadolinium. Treatment combines prolonged intravenous antibiotics (typically 6–8 weeks) with surgical drainage via laminectomy and debridement in most cases. Neurologically intact patients with small collections and a known pathogen may sometimes be managed with antibiotics alone under strict monitoring, but any neurological deterioration mandates immediate surgical intervention.

Anatomy & Pathology

The epidural space is a narrow fat-filled cavity that surrounds the dura mater — the tough outer membrane encasing the spinal cord and nerve roots. It runs the full length of the spinal canal and contains blood vessels and loose connective tissue. Because this space communicates across multiple vertebral levels, an abscess can expand up or down the canal, compressing an increasingly long segment of the spinal cord.

Symptoms

  • Severe, localized back or neck pain — often the earliest symptom
  • High fever and systemic signs of infection (chills, malaise)
  • Spinal tenderness to percussion over the affected segment
  • Progressive limb weakness and sensory loss distal to the abscess
  • Bowel and bladder dysfunction indicating cord or cauda equina compression
  • Paralysis in untreated or delayed-diagnosis cases
  • Neck stiffness if cervical epidural space is involved

Causes & Risk Factors

  • Hematogenous spread of Staphylococcus aureus (most common organism, including MRSA)
  • Direct inoculation from epidural catheter, spinal injection, or spinal surgery
  • Contiguous spread from vertebral osteomyelitis or discitis
  • Intravenous drug use with bacteremia
  • Immunosuppression: diabetes mellitus, HIV, chronic steroid use, renal failure

Treatment Options

Conservative

  • Prolonged intravenous antibiotics (6–8 weeks) — vancomycin for MRSA coverage empirically until cultures available
  • Blood cultures and CT-guided biopsy to identify pathogen and guide targeted antibiotic therapy
  • Antibiotic-alone management for neurologically intact patients with small abscess, confirmed pathogen, and close inpatient monitoring

Surgical

  • Emergency laminectomy with epidural debridement and drainage — standard for neurological deficits or failure of antibiotic therapy
  • CT-guided percutaneous drainage for accessible posterior collections in select cases
  • Instrumented posterior fusion if concomitant spinal instability from vertebral osteomyelitis is present

When to see a spine specialist

Seek emergency evaluation immediately if back or neck pain is accompanied by fever, or if any weakness, numbness, or loss of bladder or bowel control develops. Spinal epidural abscess is a surgical emergency with a narrow window for intervention before irreversible neurological injury occurs. A high index of suspicion is essential — particularly in patients with diabetes, recent procedures, or IV drug use.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How quickly does a spinal epidural abscess cause paralysis?

Neurological deterioration can be extremely rapid — from back pain alone to complete paralysis within 24–72 hours in fulminant cases. The classic progression is: spinal ache → radicular pain → motor weakness → paralysis → bowel and bladder dysfunction. Once paralysis is complete, recovery after surgery is poor. Most experts treat new neurological deficits from SEA as a surgical emergency requiring intervention within hours, not days.

Can a spinal epidural abscess be treated without surgery?

Selected patients without neurological deficits may be managed with IV antibiotics alone under strict inpatient monitoring. Criteria for non-operative management include a known pathogen susceptible to antibiotics, no neurological compromise, and the ability to undergo immediate surgery if the condition changes. Studies show that up to 40% of initially non-operative patients ultimately require surgery for progression. Any sign of neurological worsening mandates immediate operative drainage.

What is the prognosis for neurological recovery after surgery for spinal epidural abscess?

Prognosis strongly correlates with neurological status at the time of surgery. Patients who are ambulatory before surgery have good recovery rates (>80%). Patients with partial deficits have intermediate outcomes. Those with complete paralysis for more than 24–36 hours before decompression have a poor prognosis for meaningful motor recovery. This underscores that speed of diagnosis and intervention is the single most important factor in outcomes.

Related Conditions

Sources

  1. Darouiche RO. Spinal epidural abscess. N Engl J Med. 2006.
  2. Sendi P, et al. Spinal epidural abscess in clinical practice. QJM. 2008.