Y Lecture 9: Wound, bone and joint infections Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the major pathogen involved in wound, bone and joint infections?

A

MRSA/ MSSA

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2
Q

What are the 3 levels of wound infection?

A

Superficial incisional
Deep incisional
Organ/ space infection

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3
Q

Recall 2 important risk factors for wound/ bone/ joint infection

A

Diabetes

Obesity (adipose tissue is poorly-vascularised)

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4
Q

What can be done during orthpaedic procedures to reduce risk of infection?

A

Laminar flow

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5
Q

Which patient group is particularly at risk of septic arthritis?

A

Those who already have rheumatoid arthritis

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6
Q

Where in the joint do organisms adhere to in septic arthritis?

A

Synovial membrane

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7
Q

What are the symptoms of septic arthritis?

A

Red, painful and swollen joint with restricted movement

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8
Q

What investigations for septic arthritis should be done before starting antibiotics?

A
  1. Blood cultures

2. Synovial fluid aspiration

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9
Q

When is MRI indicated for septic arthritis patients?

A

When osteomyelitis is suspected

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10
Q

How is septic arthritis managed?

A

4-6 weeks IV antibiotics

Surgical washout

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11
Q

What are the symptoms of vertebral osteomyelitis?

A

Back pain and fever

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12
Q

How is osteomyelitis diagnosed?

A

MRI

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13
Q

How is vertebral osteomyelitis treated?

A

At least 6w of antibiotics

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14
Q

What is the most common pathogen implicated in prosthetic joint infections?

A

Coagulase negative staphylococcus

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15
Q

What would an x ray show in prosthetic joint infections?

A

Loosening

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16
Q

How many tissue samples are required for the lab when a patient goes to theatre for a suspected joint infection?

A

5 (If >3 yield same organism = infection)

17
Q

What are the 2 options for management of prosthetic joint infection?

A
  1. Single stage revision (removal of manky prosthesis and replacement with antibiotic-impregnated material prosthesis) 2. Two stage revision (firstly remove prosthesis and send off samples, put in a spacer, wait a few weeks, then put new prosthesis in)