Extraintestinal Salmonella infection involving the thoracic spine is very rare. It commonly presents with non-specific chronic back pain and can occur with no gastrointestinal manifestation. Blood test results and imaging findings are often indistinguishable from more common chronic spine infections such as spine tuberculosis. Culture studies remain the key to establishing a definitive diagnosis and subsequently successful treatment. We report a case in which a patient presented with symptoms and signs suggestive of spine tuberculosis, yet the culture examination revealed otherwise.
Locked knee is an orthopaedic condition requiring urgent treatment. Although the condition can be diagnosed via history, physical examination and imaging studies, the cause of the mechanical obstruction may only be apparent during arthroscopic examination of the knee joint. It is known that imaging plays a role in evaluating the integrity of intra-articular structures, however in some atypical cases, imaging cannot identify the definitive cause of locked knee. Here we report on two cases of locked knee, due to uncommon conditions which were unobservable via normal imaging studies.
Nursemaid's elbow is a radial head subluxation caused by axial traction on the extended arm while the forearm is pronated, allowing for slippage of the radial head. A 2-year-old boy presented with pain, swelling and reduced range of movement of the right elbow for 4 days. The mother noted that the child was moving the right upper limb less often and there was tenderness over the right elbow. X-ray of the right elbow showed subluxation of the elbow joint with no obvious fracture. A trial of conservative management was decided upon and the patient was placed on a right elbow backslab with the right forearm in a supine position. On follow-up, there was no swelling, tenderness or neurological deficit noted. A repeate x-ray revealed normal findings.