Osteomyelitis Flashcards
1
Q
Osteomyelitis
Definition
A
Severe and debilitating disease caused by infection of the bone
2
Q
Osteomyelitis
Pathogenesis
A
-
Hematogenous spread
- Common in underdeveloped countries
- More likely in children < 20 y/o in developed countries
-
Contiguous infection
- From wounds such as foot ulcers in diabetics
- More common adults in developed countries
-
Direct inoculation
- Trauma e.g. compound fractures
- Surgery
3
Q
Osteomyelitis
Etiologies
A
-
Typical pathogens
- Staph aureus ⇒ most common (60%)
- β-hemolytic Strep ⇒ 2nd most common
- S. epidermidis
- Coliforms (GNR) ⇒ E. Coli, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas etc.
- Children < 20 y/o in developed countries ⇒ H. influenzae and β-hemolytic Strep most common
-
Atypical pathogens:
- Sickle cell anemia pts ⇒ Salmonella
- IV drug user ⇒ Pseudomonas
- AIDS pts ⇒ fungi and mycobacterium
- MTb infection in the spine ⇒ Potts disease
4
Q
Osteomyelitis
Pathophysiology
A
- Organism travels to metaphysis where blood flow is slow
- Leaves the capillaries and enters the tissue
- Host can respond by walling it off ⇒ Brodie’s abscess
- Becomes sterile vs site of chronic infection
- If infection expands and spreads ⇒ ± large area of bone necrosis called a sequestrum
- Surrounding bone will become dense in an attempt to wall off the infection
- Isolation failure ⇒ further spread through cortex to subperiosteum
- From there it can gain access to:
-
Joint space
- Uncommon except in children d/t vascular epiphyseal plate
- Sinus tracts within the skin
-
Joint space
5
Q
Osteomyelitis
Clinical Manifestations
A
Often an insidious presentation:
- Focal pain
- Overlying warmth, erythema, swelling
- Fever, sweats
- Drainage
6
Q
Osteomyelitis
Diagnosis
A
-
Labs:
- ↑ WBC
-
↑ ESR / CRP
- Sensitive but not specific
-
Radiologic studies:
-
Plain films
- Early ⇒ osteopenia or lytic lesions
- Late ⇒ sclerotic changes
-
Nuclear medicine studies
- Bone scan, WBC scan ⇒ both show ↑ uptake in infected bone
- CT scan or MRI ⇒ can show enhancement, edema in bone
-
Plain films
-
Microbiology:
-
Blood cultures
- Usu. ⊖ unless occurring w/ active endovascular infection such as endocarditis
-
Bone biopsy with culture and path
- Gold standard for dx
-
Blood cultures
7
Q
Osteomyelitis
Treatment
A
-
Antibiotics
- Need a long course for cure (6-12 weeks)
- Usu. need IV
- ± Surgical debridement of necrotic bone
- Remove any hardware if possible