Osteomyelitis Flashcards
Define osteomyelitis
Inflammatory condition of the one caused by infection of the metaphysis of long bones
Aetiology of osteomyelitis
Haematogenous spread or inoculation (direct trauma)
Most common organism: Staphylococcus aureus
- Other: Streptococci (group A and B), H. influenzae. Kingella Kingae, TB
- Occasionally, there are multiple foci e.g. disseminated staphylococci or H. influenzae infection
Commonly affects the distal femur and proximal tibia (but any bone may be affected)
Risk factors for osteomyelitis
<5yo
Sickle cell disease (esp. staphylococcal and salmonella)
Immunodeficiency disorders
Diabetes Mellitus
Sepsis
Minor trauma with bacteraemia
Indwelling vascular catheters
Symptoms of osteomyelitis
Fever
Acute onset limb pain
Immobile limb (pseudoparesis) - movement causes severe pain
Skin swollen, tender, erythematous
Back pain (vertebral infection)
Limp or groin pain (infection of the pelvis)
Signs of osteomyelitis on examination
Fever
Joint examination
- Skin swollen, tender, erythematous
- Immobile limb (pseudoparesis) - movement causes severe pain
Investigations for osteomyelitis
Sepsis 6 + screen
Urine dip/MC&S
Blood cultures
FBC
CRP
U&Es
LFTs
VBG
X-ray affected joint:
- Early: normal
- Later (>7 days): osteopenia, bone destruction, subperiosteal new bone formation
- Moth sign = Brodie abscess
Joint aspiration + MC&S
US affected joint: periosteal elevation
MRI affected joint: ?infection
CXR: septic screen
Management for acute osteomyelitis
2 High-dose IV empirical antibiotics → narrow spectrum antibiotics (usually for 2-4 weeks):
Adults: vancomycin + ceftriaxone IV
Diabetes/paeds: Flucloxacillin + penicillin/fusidic acid
- Second line: Clindamycin (PenAll), vancomycin (MRSA)
Immobilise the affected limb
Analgesia e.g. paracetamol/NSAID
CRP returns to normal → switch to oral antibiotics for 6 weeks
No response to Abx 24-48h after treatment / dead bone / biofilm→ surgical drainage
Management for chronic osteomyelitis
> 2 weeks
Clinical assessment, disease staging (Cierny-Mader classification) and optimisation of comorbidities
Surgical debridement
IV antibiotics
Functional rehabilitation
Complications of osteomyelitis
Can spread to cause septic arthritis in sites where the joint capsule is inserted distally to the epiphyseal plate e.g. the hip
Fracture
Neurological impairment secondary to abscess or bony collapse
Growth disturbance - premature physeal closure, resulting in short limbs or angular deformity if only partial physeal arrest occurs.
Amputation
Joint stiffness
Infection recurrence
Prognosis of osteomyelitis
> 95% have complete resolution with treatment