Septic Arthritis/Osteomyelitis Flashcards
What is septic arthritis?
- infection of 1 or more joints
- caused by pathogenic inoculation of microbes (most commonly Staph Aureus, consider N. gonorrhoea in young adults)
- occurs either by direct inoculation or via hamatogenous spread
- similarly, osteomyelitis is infection of the bone -> can cause septic arthritis
- always consider septic arthritis in any acutely inflammed joint → can destroy a joint in under 24hr + mortality 11%
- crystal arthropathies main differential
- knee affected in >50% cases
What are the signs and symptoms of septic arthritis?
- hot, swollen, tender restricted joint
- +/- pyrexia
- symptoms present <2 weeks at presentation
- risk factors elicited
O/E → swelling, warmth, tenderness + restriction of movement
What are the risk factors for septic arthritis?
- underlying joint disease (RA, OA, CA)
- joint prostheses
- IV drug abuse
- diabetes mellitus
- immunosuppression
- chronic kidney disease
- presence of cutaneous ulcers
- low socioeconomic status
What investigations can be done for septic arthritis?
- joint aspiration → synovial fluid MC+S is key before starting empirical abx
- blood cultures → essential; +ve in 25%
- ESR + WCC raised
What is the management of septic arthritis?
- Obtain synovial fluid before starting treatment
- Flucloxacillin IV 2 weeks then 4 wks oral
- Or clindamycin if penicillin-allergic
- Suspected gonococcus → ceftriaxone
- Prosthetic joint → urgent referral to orthopaedics
- Needle aspiration to decompress joint
- Arthroscopic lavage may be required
All forms of acute osteomyelitis may evolve and become chronic, sharing a final common pathophysiology, with a compromised soft-tissue envelope surrounding dead, infected, and reactive new bone. The commonest organis is staph aureus again.
What are predisposing conditions to osteomyelitis?
- diabetes mellitus
- sickle cell anaemia
- IVDU
- immunosuppression due to either medication or HIV
- alcohol XS
What investigations can be done for osteomyelitis?
- Vitals → fever
- FBC/CRP/ESR → raised
- Blood culture → positive in 60%
- Plain XR → not so useful in early disease as initially normal (10-14 days), but in late disease, a sequestrum + an involucrum may become visible
- MRI → modality of choice; highly sensitive + specific
Rx is same as SA (flucloxacillin)
What are differentials for monoarthritis?
- septic arthritis
- crystal arthritis (gout, CPPD)
- osteoarthritis
- trauma (haemarthrosis)
What are differentials for oligoarthritis (<5 joints)?
- crystal arthritis
- psoriatic arthritis
- reactive arthritis eg. yersinia, salmonella, campylobacter
- ankylosing spondylitis
- osteoarthritis
What are the differentials for polyarthritis (>5 joints involves)?
- Symmetrical → RA, OA, viruses (hep ABC, mumps), systemic
- Asymmetrical → reactive arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, systemic