Infections of Bones and Joints Flashcards

1
Q

symptoms of septic arthritis

A
  • hot swollen joints
  • can lead to irreversible joint damage
  • resistance to conventional antibiotics is increasing in these cases
    1. Isolation of a pathogenic organism from an infected joint
    2. isolation of a pathogenic organism from another source in the context of a hot red joint suspicious of sepsis
    3. typical clinical features and turbid joint fluid in the presence of previous antibiotic treatment
    4. post-mortem or pathological features and suspicious of septic arthritis
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2
Q

what is a typical presentation of septic arthritis

A

1-2 weeks of a red painful and restricted joint
large joints/typically in the leg, knee and lumbosacral spine
if preexisting arthritis the joint will show signs out of proportion to disease
low virulence causative organisms and fungal and mycobacterial infections can delay presentation

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3
Q

what are the casative organisms for septic arthritis

A
  • S.aureus
  • S.pyogenes
  • S.epidermidis
  • M.tuberculosis
  • Salmonella
  • Brucella(fromunpasteuriseddairyproducts),
  • Don’t forget Neisseria gonorrhoeae in sexually active
  • Kingella can cause infections in children
  • Pasturella can cause infections in animal bites
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4
Q

what are some predisposing conditions which can increase the likelyhood of septic arthritis

A
  • Rheumatoid arthritis or osteoarthritis
  • Joint prosthesis
  • Intravenousdrugabuse
  • Alcoholism
  • Diabetes
  • Previous intra-articular corticosteroid injection
  • Cutaneous ulcers
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5
Q

how can the infection be introduced to the joint

A

– haematogenous spread

– direct inoculation e.g. trauma or iatrogenically.

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6
Q

Reactive arthritis

A
  • classic triad conjunctivitis, urethritis, and arthritis
    • Occurring after an infection e.g. urogenital or GI tract.
    • Epidemiologically, the disease is more common in men
    • HLA-B27 is associated with reactive arthritis
    • Dermatologic manifestations
    – keratoderma blennorrhagicum
    – circinate balanitis
    – ulcerative vulvitis
    – nailchanges
    – oral lesions
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7
Q

reactive arthritis organisms

A

– Chlamydia trachomatis
– Shigella flexneri
– Salmonella enteritidis/typhimurium/muenchen

Reactive arthritis may be treated with full dose NSAID with gastric protection and treatment of precipitating factors e.g. Chlamydia

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8
Q

Osteomyelitis

A

inflammation of the bone and bone marrow usually caused by pyogenic bacteria, and rarely by mycobacteria or fungi

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9
Q

what causes infection in osteomyelitis

A

• Haematogenous spread • Local spread (from septic
arthritis)
• Compound fracture (open)
• Foreign body

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10
Q

Predisposition to Osteomyelitis

A
organism and the predisposition it leads to:
salmonella - sickle cell disease 
brucella - milk/travel
s.epidermis - prosthesis
H.influenzae - children under 5 
ecoli and others - UTI
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11
Q

Haematogenous Spread to Bones

A

• Usually asymptomatic
• Skin sepsis may be present (but is usually
absent)
• Organisms settle in growing metaphysis near growth plate

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12
Q

foreign bodies that can cause osteomyelitis

A
  • Trauma
  • Shrapnel/Gun shot wound
  • Orthopaedic implant (K nail)
  • Nail through trainer (Pseudomonas)
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13
Q

Organisms responsible for osteomyelitis

A
  • S. aureus (>80%)
  • S. pyogenes (~5%)
  • Gram negative bacteria • M. tuberculosis
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14
Q

symptoms/sign of osteomyelitis

A
  • Painful swollen site
  • Fever
  • Reduced movement (may be only sign in very young)
  • Paraplegia
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15
Q

preliminary investigations for osteomyelitis

A
  • Fever
  • WBC
  • ESR
  • CRP
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16
Q

further investigations for osteomyelitis

A
Investigations
• Bloodculture
• X-ray
• MRI/CT/Bonescan 
• 
• Take 3 cultures (surgeons may take up to 6)
• May be negative early on in the course of infection
• Operative sample
17
Q

therapeutic regimes

A

• Alternatives empirical
- Ciprofloxacin (for Salmonella infection)
- Isoniazid, Rifampicin, Pyrazinamide, Ethambutol (tuberculosis)
• Drainage/Removal of involucrum