TY - JOUR T1 - Diskography: Infectious Complications from a Series of 12,634 Cases JF - American Journal of Neuroradiology JO - Am. J. Neuroradiol. SP - 1930 LP - 1932 VL - 27 IS - 9 AU - R.S. Pobiel AU - K.P. Schellhas AU - S.R. Pollei AU - B.A. Johnson AU - M.J. Golden AU - J.A. Eklund Y1 - 2006/10/01 UR - http://www.ajnr.org/content/27/9/1930.abstract N2 - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Diskography is commonly performed to investigate pain of suspected diskogenic origin. Although uncommon, diskitis is a feared complication of this procedure. We reviewed the incidence of diskitis and other infectious complications following diskography in a large busy outpatient practice and discuss technical aspects that may contribute to infection prevention.METHODS: We reviewed the electronic records of all diskograms obtained at our institution during a 12.25-year period, looking for all cases of procedure-related infection. All diskograms had been obtained by skilled and experienced procedural radiologists in dedicated spine-injection suites with specialized technical staff.RESULTS: There were 12,634 examinations performed on 10,663 patients for a total of 37,135 disk levels. Of the disk levels, 5981 were cervical; 3083, thoracic; and 28,071, lumbar. Two cases of confirmed lumbar diskitis and no cases of either cervical or thoracic diskitis were seen in our series. No other infectious complications were found. The incidence of diskitis was 0.016% per examination and 0.0054% per disk level.CONCLUSION: In skilled and experienced hands using proper technique, diskography is a safe outpatient procedure with an extremely low incidence of diskitis and other procedure-related infections. ER -