Osteomyelitis and Septic Arthritis



Osteomyelitis and Septic Arthritis


Kelly Keogh

Andrew Mason



Osteomyelitis



  • Osteomyelitis results from hematogenous dissemination of an organism into the metaphysis of a long bone


  • Occasionally direct inoculation into bone from trauma


  • Bacterial proliferation evokes an inflammatory exudate leading to destruction of bone, necrosis of cortex, and elevation, then rupture of periosteum


  • Causes pain in affected limb


  • Lower limbs most often affected


Pathophysiology



  • Often associated with septic arthritis in children < 1 year and in joints with intracapsular metaphyses (proximal radius, humerus, and femur)

Children < 1 year:



  • Called septic osteomyelitis of infancy


  • Epiphysis contains capillaries that facilitate spread of osteomyelitis to contiguous joint space

Children > 1 year:



  • Hematogenously spread infection starts in metaphyseal sinusoidal veins


  • Infection contained within metaphysis and diaphysis by avascular epiphysis, which acts as a barrier


  • Infection spreads laterally to break through cortex and lifts the loose periosteum, creating a subperiosteal abscess



Clinical Presentation



  • Very similar to septic arthritis; clinical differentiation may be difficult


  • Sudden onset of bone pain, often with high fever


  • Bone pain is manifested according to age:



    • Infants: pseudoparalysis (voluntary immobilization of affected limb), crying with movement of limb


    • Child: pseudoparalysis, refusal to weight bear, limp


  • Examination: look unwell, may hold affected limb immobile, point tenderness at site of infection: difficult to assess in struggling toddler



    • Local erythema and edema if purulent material has ruptured through the cortex


  • Often an effusion is detectable


Investigations



  • CBC (WBC normal in > 50%)


  • Blood culture (causative organism 50-70%)


  • ESR (acute phase reactant; insensitive, nonspecific), CRP



    • Elevated in 90% and 98% of cases, respectively


    • Useful for monitoring effectiveness of therapy


    • ESR peaks 3-5 days after initiation of therapy and normalizes in ˜ 3 weeks


    • CRP peaks at day 2 and normalizes within 1 week in uncomplicated cases


  • X-ray: to exclude fracture



    • Initially, films will be normal


    • At 10-12 days: osseous destruction visible, reflecting 40% bone loss


  • Ultrasound: to rule out joint effusion if necessary to differentiate osteomyelitis from septic arthritis and to exclude concomitant septic arthritis


  • Bone radionuclide scan:

    Technetium scan-tracer = Tc99m bound to phosphorus




    • Accumulates in areas of increased osteoblast activity with increased blood flow and new bone formation


    • Test of choice; sensitivity and specificity 95%


    • Usually positive within 2-3 days of onset of infection


  • Gallium citrate scan:



    • Radioactive gallium citrate acts as an analog of calcium and iron and attaches to transferrin to accumulate at sites of inflammation


    • Most sensitive and specific for vertebral osteomyelitis


  • Bone biopsy: definitive diagnosis based on positive bone or blood cultures or histopathologic changes consistent with osteomyelitis



    • If cultures are negative, needle biopsy may be necessary to provide tissue for histopathologic analysis


  • CT scan/MRI useful in select cases (sequestra, abscess)


Treatment


Medical Management

Jun 22, 2016 | Posted by in EMERGENCY MEDICINE | Comments Off on Osteomyelitis and Septic Arthritis

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