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Diagnosing Spinal Gout: A Rare Case of Back Pain and Fever.

Andres Cordova SanchezManeesh BisenFarzam KhokharAdriana MayJihad Ben Gabr
Published in: Case reports in rheumatology (2021)
Gout is a common inflammatory arthritis that has a high prevalence worldwide. It is characterized by monosodium urate deposition, usually affecting the joints and soft tissue of the lower extremities. Urate deposition in the axial skeleton resulting in spinal gout is rare. However, it seems to be more prevalent than usually thought, largely because it is underdiagnosed. Imaging findings are, for the most part, nonspecific and often mimic infectious etiologies. Definitive diagnosis requires pathological examination. Thus, it can be easily missed. We present a 41-year-old male with a seven-year history of untreated gout who came in with severe back pain, fevers, and radiculopathy. He was initially diagnosed with vertebral osteomyelitis. However, after a biopsy, spinal gout was confirmed. Spinal gout can be misdiagnosed as vertebral osteomyelitis given the similarities in presentation and imaging findings. This case report highlights the importance of keeping spinal gout as a differential of vertebral osteomyelitis, especially in patients with long-standing or uncontrolled gout with tophi.
Keyphrases
  • uric acid
  • spinal cord
  • case report
  • rare case
  • high resolution
  • soft tissue
  • metabolic syndrome
  • bone mineral density
  • rheumatoid arthritis
  • risk factors
  • spinal cord injury
  • body composition
  • early onset