2. MSK p190-193 (Infection) Flashcards
Osteomyelitis features (5)
Radiographs will be normal for 7-10 days.
Can have any appearance, any location, any age.
Children get haematogenous spread to long bones (metaphysis).
Adults more likely direct spread (diabetics).
Generally, septic joints more common in adults, osteomyelitis more common in kids.
Osteomyelitis in spine
IVDU
Osteomyelitis in spine with kyphosis
Gibbus deformity (T)
Unilateral Sacroilitis
IVDU
Psoas muscle abscess
TB
Hallmarks of osteomyelitis
Destruction of bone and periosteal new bone formation
Brodie’s abscess (2)
Bone abscess due to chronic infection.
Well circumscribed, may have osseous sequestrum (piece of necrotic bone surrounded by granulation tissue).
Bony sequestration DDx (4)
Osteomyelitis
EG
Lymphoma
Fibrosarcoma
Involucrum definition
Thick sheath of periosteal bone around sequestrum
Cloaca definition
Space/tract where the dead bone exists.
Acute bacterial osteomyelitis - types (3)
3 different categories
- Haematogenous seeding (most common in child)
- Contiguous spread
- Direct innoculation of bone from surgery or trauma
Acute bacterial osteomyelitis - Age (4)
Prefers long bones, specifically metaphysis (best blood supply)
Age <1 month: Multicentric involvement, often with joint involvement (bone scan often negative)
Age <18 months: Spread to epiphysis by blood
Age 2-16 years: Trans-physeal vessels closed (primary focus is metaphysis)
Acute bacterial osteomyelitis - spread (3)
In older babies (<18 months), vessels from metaphysis to epiphysis atrophy, growth plate stops the spread (although spread can still occur), creating septic tank effect.
Similar effect seen in certain cancers e.g. leukaemia.
Once growth plate fuses, this obstruction is no longer present
Acute bacterial osteomyelitis - imaging (2)
MRI: Low T1 signal in bone marrow adjacent to ulcer or cellulitis is diagnostic.
Ghost sign: Poor definition of margins of bone on T1 with reappearance on T2 or post contrast.
Discitis/osteomyelitis - spread/cause (5)
Infection of the disc and infection of the vertebral body often go together.
This is due to route of seeding, often involved seeding of the vertebral endplate (vascular) and subsequent eruption and crossing into disc space and eventually adjacent vertebral body.
Adults: source usually from recent surgery, procedure or systemic infection.
Kids: Usually haematogenous spread.
Staph A is most common bug, IVDU get gram negatives.