Brucellar spondylodiscitis: A case series with focus on histopathological features.

2020 
: Brucellar spondylodiscitis (BS) is the most common form of musculoskeletal brucellosis. The isolation of Brucella spp from blood, other body fluids or tissue cultures is the gold standard for definitive diagnosis of BS. BS shows a large histopathological spectrum of lesions with non-specific and granulomatous forms, and its histopathological features are not widely reported. This case series study reported the histopathological features of a series of 21 BS. Ten cases revealed nonspecific forms of BS. Lymphocytes were the predominant inflammatory cells in this group. In one case neutrophils were predominant. The eleven remaining were granulomatous. The 11 exhibited histiocytic type granulomas. Ten were non-necrotizing. One case, taken from abscess wall, contained minimal deposition of caseous like necrotic material. This case and 2 others corresponding to abscess wall biopsies, showed histiocytic granulomas mixed with small aggregates of epithelioid cells without well-formed epithelioid granuloma nor giant cell. The histopathological diagnosis of BS is challenging. Nonspecific forms of BS, mimiking pyogenic spondylodiscitis, are observed in about half of the cases. Although nonspecific forms of BS are characterized by the predominance of lymphocytes and plasmocytes, BS forms with predominant neutrophil cell infiltration do exist. Histiocytic granuloma is highly suggestive of BS. Purely epithelioid forms of BS were not observed in the present series. Caseous like necrosis suggestive of tuberculosis is a possible feature of BS.
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