Bone and Joint Infection
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Transcript of Bone and Joint Infection
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Prof. Mamoun KremliAlMaarefa College
Bone and Joint Infection
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Objectives
Understand the
Pathogenesis,
clinical picture, and
principles of management of
Acute osteomyelitisChronic osteomyelitisChronic specific osteomyelitis – TBAcute septic arthritis
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Infection in Bone
Osteomyelitis (Bone and marrow infection):Osteo = bonemyel = bone marrowitis = inflammation
AcuteSub-acuteChronic
Specific (e,g. TB, Brucellosis, Fungal)Non specific (most common)
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Route of Infection
Micro-organisms may reach the musculoskeletal tissues by:
Indirect spread via blood stream from a distant site The commonest Prick, injection, boil, distant wound
infection Nose, mouth, respiratory tract,
bowel, genitourinary tract
Direct spread from a contiguous focus of infection
Direct implantation from trauma or surgery
Slide Atlas of Orthop Radiology, A Greenspan. Gower Med Publ.
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Factors and Types
Factors affecting type and severity:Type of invaderSite of infectionHost response
TypesPyogenic osteomyelitisSeptic arthritisChronic granulomatous reaction
Tuberculosis of bone or jointIndolent response to unusual organism
Fungal infection
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Pathology
Infection: Multiplication and spread of pathogenic organisms within the body tissues
Inflammatory reaction: Acute / Subacute / Chronic Redness, heat, swelling, pain, loss of function
http://sphweb.bumc.bu.edu/
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Pathology
Bone infection is different from soft-tissue infection:Bone consists of rigid compartmentsPressure is increased in acute inflammationMore vascular damage and cell death because of the
tight compartmentsIf not rapidly suppressed, will lead to necrosis
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Principles of Treatment
1. Analgesia, rest, general supportive measures
2. Identify organism, use effective antibiotics or chemotherapy
3. Release pus as soon as it is detected, and remove avascular and necrotic tissue
4. Stabilize the bone if fractured
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Acute pyogenic bone infection
Pathology:Formation of pus
a concentrate of defunct leucocytes, dead and dying bacteria and tissue debris
Localized in an abscess. Pressure builds up (tight space)Local spread
Through the cortexAlong adjacent tissue planesNearby joint
Distant spreadvia lymphatics
causing lymphangitis & lymphadenopathy
via the blood stream (bacteremia & septicemia)
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Principles of Treatment
Acute infections, if treated early with effective antibiotics, can usually be cured
Operative drainage needed once there is pus and bone necrosis
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Acute haematogenous OM
Mostly children
Boys> girls
History of trauma often present? Micro-hematoma, ? insignificant
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Acute OM - source of infection
Hematological (the commonest)
Infants:infected umbilical cord
Children:Boils, tonsillitis, skin abrasions, pricks, …
Adults:UTI, urinary catheter, indwelling arterial line, septic
tooth, dirty needle…
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Acute OM - organisms
Gram +veStaphylococcus aureus (70%)Streptococcus pyogenesStreptococcus pneumoniae
Gram –veHaemophilus influenzae (50% < 4 y)Escherichia coliPseudomonas aeruginosaProteus mirabilisSalmonella species in patients
with sickle cell disease (why?)
http://pedemmorsels.com
http://pedemmorsels.com
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Acute OM - children
Metaphysis of long bonesUpper tibia, proximal or distal femur?TraumaPeculiar arrangement of blood
vesselsTerminal arteries twist back in
hairpin loopsVascular stasisLowered oxygen tension
www.heightquest.com
http://cnx.org
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Acute OM - children
Metaphysis of long bones
In infants, infection may reach Epiphysisanastomoses between metaphyseal and epiphyseal
blood vessels
www.heightquest.com
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Acute OM - pathology
Inflammation: Intra-osseous pressure rises
Sever pain & obstruction of blood flow
SuppurationPus from day 2Sub-periosteal pus collection
Re-enters boneTo soft tissueTo joint
In infants In joints where metaphysis is partly intra-capsular
Hip, shoulder, elbow
www0.sun.ac.za
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Acute OM - pathology
May spread to the joint causing Septic ArthritisIn infantsIn joints where
metaphysis is partly intra-capsularHip, shoulder, elbow
Essentials of Orthop Surgery,S Weisel, J Delahay. Saunders
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Acute OM - pathology
Necrosis (7 days)Blood supply compromised by
raised pressure, stasis, thrombosis, periosteal stripping
Sequestrum formation (dead bone)
New bone formationSub-periosteal Involucrum formation
Resolution If infection controlled, &
pressure released
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Clinical Features - Children
Severe pain
Malaise
Fever
Reluctant to move
Toxemia
History of previous source of infectionSore throat, skin infection, prick, injury
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Clinical Features - Children
Localized pinpoint tenderness
Hotness
Local redness, swelling, edema (late signs)
Reduced range of motion
http://quizlet.com
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Clinical Features - Infants
Constitutional symptoms may be mild
Failure to thrive, drowsy, irritable
Metaphyseal tenderness
Decreased ROM
Commonest around the knee
History of other infections (umbilical)
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Clinical Features - Adults
Commonly thoracolumbar spine
Fever
Backache
History of UTI or urological procedure
Old ,diabetic, immune-compromised,
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Diagnosis
History and clinical examination
WBC, ESR, CRP
X-ray (normal in the first (10-14) days
Ultrasound
Bone Scan Tc 99, Gallium 67
MRI
Aspiration
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Acute OM - x-rays
First sign (10-14 days)Metaphyseal rarefactionPeriosteal reaction (new bone formation)
Apley,s System of Orthop & Fractures
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Acute OM - x-rays
First sign (10-14 days)Metaphyseal rarefactionPeriosteal reaction (new bone formation)
LaterIncreasing ragged appearance (mottling)Sclerosis, rarefactionCavitationSequestrumInvolucrum: new bone formation
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Acute OM - ultrasound
Detects sub-periosteal pus collection
Osteomyelitis. Mauricio Baptista
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Acute OM - Bone scan
Increased activity – early
Osteomyelitis. Mauricio Baptista
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Acute OM – MRI
Distinguish bet. bone & soft tissue infection
Perfect to detect early signs of infection – replacing bone scan
Osteomyelitis. Mauricio Baptista
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Acute OM – other tests
WBC: leukocytosis, neutrophils
C-reactive protein: rises very early
ESR: raises several days
Blood culture
Aspiration from sub-periosteal collection or jointGood, even if no pusSmear for cells and bacteriaCulture / sensitivity
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Differential Diagnosis
Cellulitis
Acute septic arthritis
Acute rheumatism
Sickle cell crisis