Major Spinal Surgery Between Two Documented COVID-19 Infections in an Elderly Female: A Case Report

Authors

  • Bishruti Sharma Department of Neurosurgery, Chirayau National Hospital and Medical Institute, Basundhara, Kathmandu, Nepal https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8128-3388
  • Nabin Paudyal Department of Surgery, Nobel Medical College and Teaching Hospital, Biratnagar, Nepal
  • Binod Rajbhandari Department of Neurosurgery, Chirayau National Hospital and Medical Institute, Basundhara, Kathmandu, Nepal
  • Amit Pradhanang Department of Neurosurgery, Chirayau National Hospital and Medical Institute, Basundhara, Kathmandu, Nepal
  • Nikita Dwa Department of Internal Medicine, Chirayau National Hospital and Medical Institute, Basundhara, Kathmandu, Nepal
  • Ajay Pradhan Department of Internal Medicine, Chirayau National Hospital and Medical Institute, Basundhara, Kathmandu, Nepal
  • Mohan Raj Sharma Department of Neurosurgery, Chirayau National Hospital and Medical Institute, Basundhara, Kathmandu, Nepal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31729/jnma.6507

Keywords:

COVID-19, re-infection, spinal fracture

Abstract

Documented re-infection of COVID-19 is uncommon and doing a major spinal surgery in an elderly patient right after the recovery from the first event is itself a major undertaking. Re-infection after successful surgery points to the possibility of COVID-19 infection being a post-surgical complication. Here, we report a case of a 72-years-old elderly female who had presented to us with features of COVID-19 infection confirmed by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction assay and unstable spinal fracture who underwent a pedicle screw fixation for the fracture of the third and fourth thoracic vertebrae after two consecutive negative serology assays. A month after discharge from the hospital, she presented with severe symptoms of COVID-19 again confirmed by two consecutive polymerase chain reaction assays. She was managed conservatively and was discharged without significant respiratory and neurological complications. We described this case in detail in addition to reviewing the pertinent literature.

Additional Files

Published

2021-11-19

How to Cite

Sharma, B., Paudyal, N., Rajbhandari, B. ., Pradhanang, A. ., Dwa, N., Pradhan, A., & Sharma, M. R. (2021). Major Spinal Surgery Between Two Documented COVID-19 Infections in an Elderly Female: A Case Report. Journal of Nepal Medical Association, 59(242), 1044–1047. https://doi.org/10.31729/jnma.6507