MI: Wound, bone and joint infections Pt.2 Flashcards
Which imaging techniques are used in septic arthritis
Ultrasound - shows effusion and guides needle aspiration
MRI - shows joint effusion, cartilage destruction, abscess, contigous osteomyelitis
How should septic arthritis be managed?
- Antibiotics
- Drainage of the joint (arthroscopic washout) - if infection does not respond to ABx
Describe the antibiotic regime in septic arthritis
Flucloxacillin
- 2 weeks IV (OPAT)
- 4 weeks oral
Vancomycin if MRSA
Gonococcal or gram-negative infection - cefotaxime/ceftriaxone
What are the two possible ways in which vertebral osteomyelitis can occur?
- Acute haematogenous spread (bacteraemia)
- Exogenous (implant during disc surgery)
List some organisms that can cause vertebral osteomyelitis.
- Staphylococcus aureus (48%)
- Streptococcus (43.1%)
- Gram-negative rods (23.1%)
- Coagulase-negative staphylococcus
In which region of the vertebral column is vertebral osteomyelitis most common?
Lumbar (43%)
Cervical (10.6%)
What are the symptoms of vertebral osteomyelitis?
- Back pain
- Fever
- Neurological impairment
List some investigations for vertebral osteomyelitis.
- MRI (90% sensitive)
- Blood cultures
- CT-guided/open biopsy
How is vertebral osteomyelitis treated?
Antibiotics (at least 6 weeks)
Surgery if there is spinal cord compression
Outline the presentation of chronic osteomyelitis.
- Pain
- Brodie’s abscess - intraosseous abcess
- Sinus tract
How is chronic osteomyelitis diagnosed?
- MRI
- Bone biopsy for culture and histology
How is chronic osteomyelitis treated?
- Radical debridement down to living bone
- Sequestrectomy - remove sequestra (dead bone tissue) and infected bone disease
What are the clinical features of prosthetic joint infection?
- Pain
- Early failure
- Sinus tract
Which organism most commonly causes prosthetic joint infection?
- Coagulase-negative staphylococcus
- Staph aureus
- Gram-negative less likely
Others: streptococci, enterococci, enterobacteriaciae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, anaerobes
How is prosthetic joint infection diagnosed?
- Radiology - shows loosening of the prosthesis
- Joint aspiration WCC (>1700/mL if knee; >4200/mL if hip)