Osteomyelitis Flashcards
1
Q
ESSENCE
A
Inflammation in a bone and bone marrow, usually caused by bacterial infection
2
Q
What is haematogenous osteomyelitis
A
Pathogen carried through blood and seeded in the bone, most common mode of infection
3
Q
AETIOLOGY
Most common causative organism
A
Staph aureus
4
Q
AETIOLOGY
Risk factors
A
- Open fracture
- Orthopaedic operation
- Diabetes
- Peripheral arterial disease
- IV drug use
- Immunosuppresion
5
Q
CLINICAL FEATURES
Presentation
A
- Fever
- Pain and tenderness
- Erythema
- Swelling
- Generalised symptoms
- Fever, lethargy, nausea and muscle aches
6
Q
INVESTIGATIONS
First choice
A
- X-ray
- Often shows no change
- MRI scan
- Best to establish diagnosis
- Blood tests
- Raised inflammatory markers (WBC, CRP, ESR)
- Blood cultures
- Bone cultures
7
Q
What are signs on x-ray
A
- Periosteal reaction (changes to surface of bones)
- Localised osteopenia (thinning of bone)
- Destruction of areas of bone
8
Q
MANAGEMENT
General principles
A
- Combination of
- Surgical debridement
- Antibiotic therapy
9
Q
MANAGEMENT
Antibiotics for acute
A
- 6 weeks of flucloxacillin, possibly with rifampicin or fusidic acid added for first 2 weeks
- Alternatives
- Clindamycin in penicillin allergy
- Vancomycin or teicoplanin for MRSA
10
Q
MANAGEMENT
Antibiotics for chronic
A
3 months of antibiotics, same ones as for acute