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Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009
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Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

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Page 1: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Bone and Joint Infections

July, 2009

Page 2: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 1

• A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical game. Two weeks later she complained of increased pain over the area accompanied by a low grade fever and sweats. She didn’t tell her parents. Her coach told her to quit complaining. However, her symptoms persisted and 2 weeks later she went to her pediatrician. Physical exam revealed a temperature of 38 C and a slightly swollen and warm left proximal tibia.

Page 3: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 1

• What tests would you order?

Plain film, blood culture, ESR

Page 4: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 1

www.imc.gsm.com

Page 5: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 1

• What tests might have been positive 2 weeks earlier?

Bone scan, WBC scan, AB-CD15 scan, Gallium scan, MRI

Page 6: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 1

www.imc.gsm.com

Page 7: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 1

• What is the most likely organism?

• Do you need to perform a needle biopsy for diagnosis?

• How would you treat this patient? Does she need debridement? Which antibiotics and for how long?

S. aureus > streptococci

BC+: no. Needle biopsy culture sensitivity ~ 40%, Histopathology increases yield

Antibiotics, probably not, many choices; nafcillin,Ceftriaxone, oral abx. Empiric treatment for MRSA?

Page 8: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 2

• A 26 year old thrill-seeker suffered an open fracture of his right tibia and fibula while roller-blading behind a motorcycle driven by his ex-girlfriend. The fracture was reduced and fixed with the placement of screws, plates and rods. He did remarkably well until 4 months later when he noted a pimple followed by a little drainage from one of wounds. Four days later he was chasing his ex-girlfriend up some stairs and heard a loud crack and looked down to find hardware and bone protruding through his right leg.

Page 9: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 2

• Why did his leg break (the second time)?

• What is the most likely bug?

• What specimens do you want sent to the lab?

• Can you rely on cultures taken from the sinus tract?

Pathologic fracture

S. aureus, CoNS > GNR

Bone cultures

Generally noIf S. aureus or single organism - some + predictive value

Page 10: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diagnosis - Culture

• Gold standard is open bone biopsy for histopathology and culture.

• Needle biopsy has a sensitivity of 87% and a specificity of 93%. However, in the post-operative or post-trauma setting its performance is compromised.

• Histopathology of needle biopsy yields diagnosis even if a specific organism is not identified

Page 11: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diagnosis - Culture

• Superficial or sinus tract cultures correlate poorly with bone cultures in most studies (< 50%).

• Perry (1991) found a 62% correlation between wound swab and operative cultures and a 55% correlation between needle biopsy and operative cultures. Better correlation demonstrated for mono-microbial infections (80 and 76%) and S. aureus infections (69% and 74%).

• Bottom line: don't trust sinus cultures unless the results yields a single organism or S. aureus

Page 12: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 2

• Should all the hardware be removed or can the leg be set and he be treated with antibiotics alone?

• What antibiotics would you recommend, by what route and how long would you treat him?

Best: 2 or 3 step procedure: remove hardware,antibiotics, new hardware laterSome success without removing hardware if infection detected early, sensitive bug

Vancomycin/rifampin/quinoloneA long time

Page 13: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Clinical Presentation

Cierny-Mader staging• Anatomic stage

– Stage 1 – medullary infection only, hematogenous spread or spread through an intramedullary prosthesis

– Stage 2 – superficial infection, due to a contiguous soft tissue infection, could also be termed osteotis

– Stage 3 – localized infection, full thickness infection (one cortex), bone integrity maintained

– Stage 4 – diffuse infection (both cortexes), destabilizes bone (or resection would destabilize bone)

Page 14: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Treatment

Cierny-Mader staging• Stage 1 – Antibiotics alone. Patients with rods in

place require removal. Adults without hardware may require medullary reaming.

• Stage 2 – Debride to bleeding bone and antibiotics

• Stage 3 – Follow principles of removal of necrotic bone, elimination of dead space and soft tissue coverage plus antibiotics

• Stage 4 – Same as stage 3 plus fracture stabilization.

Page 15: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 3

• A 72 yo male who underwent a right THR 6 months ago, then developed an enterococcal UTI 3 months ago and now presents with low grade fevers and pain in the right hip that prevents ambulation.

Page 16: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 3

• Imaging reveals a peri-prosthetic fluid collection

• Culture of this fluid grows MRSA and enterococcus

(Lew, Lancet, 2004)

Page 17: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 3

• How should he be treated?

Two stage replacement with 2 - 6 wks between surgeries.Time between operations for tough-to-treat organisms - 6 to 8 wks.Stop abx 1 -2 wks before 2nd operation - if cultures neg - stop, ifcultures +, continue abx for 3 months (6 months for knees).

Page 18: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 3

• Are there situations when the prosthesis can be retained after debridement?

Symptoms < 3 weeksStable implantEasy to treat organism

Success rates 82-100%

Page 19: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 3

• Are there indications for single stage replacement?

Symptoms >3 weeksSoft tissue in good shapeNo co-morbiditiesEasy to treat organism

Success rates 86-100%

Page 20: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Treatment

• Ciprofloxacin/rifampin for Osteomyelitis (Zimmerli, 1998)

• N=33, stable implants• Staphylococcus• All treated with debridement and 2

weeks of rifampin + vancomycin or flucloxacin

• Then either cipro/rifampin or cipro/placebo

• Prostheses retained• Median duration of symptoms 5d

0102030405060708090

100

Cipro Cipro/rif

Page 21: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Treatment

0

20

40

60

80

100

Hips Knees Bone plates Total

Ofloxacin/rifampin for Staphylococcal Osteomyelitis (N=47)

Prosthesis removed: hips (42%), knees (60%), bone plates (50%)All 11 failures occurred in patients with retained prostheses (8) or resistant staphylococcus (8) or both (6) (Drancourt 1993)

Page 22: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Treatment

0

20

40

60

80

100

Cured Indeter Failed

Ceftriaxone for S. aureus Osteomyelitis (N=33)

All had native bone infection or prosthesis removal, all treated with 2 weeks of nafcillin, vancomycin or cefazolin initially - then ceftriaxone 2 gms/d for 4 to 5 weeks (Guglielmo, 2000)

Page 23: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 4

• A 39 year old IVDU reports to the ER with fever and back pain. He mixes his drugs with dirty tap water and does not prep his skin before injecting. On exam his temperature is 39 C, he has a 3/6 holo-systolic murmur and tenderness over his thoracic spine on percussion. Neurological exam is initially normal.

Page 24: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 4

• Diagnoses?

• Likely organisms?

• Initial antibiotics?

• Imaging studies?

Endocarditis, vertebral OM, epidural abscess

Staphylococcus > streptococci > GNR > fungi

Nafcillin and gentamicin or vancomycin and gentamicin

MRI

Page 25: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 4

• The lab reports that 3/4 blood cultures have turned positive in 4 hours and are growing a GPC, the following day the lab reports that 2 blood cultures are also growing GNR.

• Likely organisms?

• The patient starts complaining of mid-thoracic radicular pain. What does this represent?

S. aureus > streptococci; P. aeruginosa > other GNR

Spinal ache - first sign of epidural abscess

Page 26: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 4

www.xray.2000

Tomogram CT MRI

Page 27: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 4

• What do you recommend?

• What are indications for debridement of vertebral osteomyelitis?

MRI, decompression (laminectomy or aspiration)

InstabilityAbscessCord compressionCervical infectionMedical failureNeurological signs or symptoms

Page 28: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 5

• A 56 year old diabetic man visits his PCP for a routine visit. He is noted to have a 2.5 cm ulcer on the plantar surface of his foot at the first metatarsal head, extending up to the great toe. He was unaware of the ulcer although, in retrospect, he recalls that his socks have been stained and foul smelling lately. He has not noted fevers or chills. His physician notes a hard, gritty surface at the base of the ulcer.

Page 29: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 5

• Recommended work-up

In this case, plain films, ESR sufficientOf all imaging modalities - MR is most accurate

(sensitivity > 90%, specificity > 80%) Combination of WBC scan or ABscan with MRI can improve specificity

Page 30: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diagnosis

• The gold standard is histopathologic evidence for osteomyelitis with supporting microbiologic data

• However, in many cases the diagnosis rests on clinical, laboratory and radiographic data

Page 31: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diagnosis

Sometimes it’s easy: • Compatible history and physical exam, elevated

ESR, elevated WBC (acute osteomyelitis)• Positive blood cultures (50% in cases of acute

osteomyelitis)• Classic radiographic findings

Page 32: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diagnosis

In many cases the diagnosis is difficult• Atypical presentations• Non-specific symptomatology• Co-morbid local and generalized conditions that

confound and obscure the infection

Page 33: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

What are exam findings that predict bone involvement?

– Larger (> 2cm, 92% specificity) and deeper ( > 3mm) associated with osteomyelitis

– Probe to bone – 66% sensitivity and 85% specificity, PPV around 55%, NPV 98%

– ESR > 70: 100% specificity (only 28% sensitivity)

(Grayson, JAMA,1995;273:721-3)(Newman, JAMA, 1991;266:1246-51)(Kaleta, J Am Pod Med Assoc, 2001;91:445-50)(Dinh, CID, 2008;47:519-27)

Page 34: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

What are the best imaging modalities?• Plain film• CT scan• MRI scan• Nuclear medicine studies

Page 35: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

Plain films • Need 30 to 50% mineral loss for x-ray

changes to be evident - takes at least 14 days

• Sensitivity 43-75%, specificity 75-83%

• Insensitive with acute osteomyelitis

• In chronic infection - sclerosis, periosteal elevation and sequestra.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

(www.podiatry.files.wordpress.com)(Lipsky, CID, 1997;25:1318-26)

Page 36: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

CT• Best method for

detecting small areas of necrosis, gas, foreign bodies

• Metallic foreign bodies compromise the image

(www.xray.2000)

Page 37: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

MRI• Sensitivity 82-100%

• Specificity 53-94% (tumors, fractures, post surgery, sympathetic edema, infarction – all can look the same; light up on T2 weighted image)

• BEST SINGLE TEST

• Location important - – Heel and malleoli with ulcer = osteo

– Midfoot, joint-centered, no ulcer - Charcot

• Combine with Ind-111 WBC scans or gallium scans to increase specificity (www.med.harvard.edu)

(Eckman, JAMA, 1995;273:712-20)(Croll, J Vasc Surg,1996:24:266-70)(Craig, Radiology, 1997;203:849-55)(Enderle, Diabetes Care, 1999;22:294-9)

Page 38: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

Bone scan (TC-99 labeled phosphorus)

• Soft tissue infection will be positive in the immediate (blood flow) and 15 minute (blood pool) phases while osteomyelitis will be positive in these 2 plus the delayed (> 4 hour) images.

• Sensitivity 69-100% (> 95% in acute osteomyelitis), specificity 38-82% (tumors, fractures, post-surgery, septic arthritis, Paget’s disease, Charcot foot)

(www.postgradmed.com)

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

(Eckman, JAMA, 1995;273:712-20)(Enderle, Diabetes Care, 1999;22:294-9)

Page 39: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

AB + WBC scan (Ind-111)• Will be positive prior to bone

scan

• Useful p-surgery (better than MRI) which will always be abnormal

• When combined with bone scan has specificity in the 90% range, sensitivity in the 70% range and PP value in the 90% range

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

(www.nuclearonline.org)(Becker, QJ Nuc Med, 1999;43:9-20)(Unal, Clin Nuc Med, 2001;26:1016-21)

Page 40: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Newer Imaging Tests

• Tc-99 monoclonal (Fab fragments) against CD-15: sensitivity and specificity ~ 85%

• IND-111 biotin: used and concentrated in bacteria: sensitivity and specificity for vertebral OM ~ 95%

• PET: better than WBC scans for chronic vertebral OM. Limited use in patients with diabetes and cancer

Page 41: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 5

• What organisms are likely responsible for this infection? QuickTime™ and a

TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

(www.erc.montana.edu)

Page 42: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

Infection Organisms

No infection S. aureus, ß streptococci

Infected ulcer (abx naïve)

S. aureus, ß streptococci

Chronically infected ulcer (often previously treated)

S. aureus, ß streptococci, enterococci, Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas species and other NLF GNR

Necrotic, malodorous, “fetid” foot

S. aureus, ß streptococci, enterococci, Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas species and other NLF GNR + anaerobes

Page 43: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 5

• Recommended treatment

Surgical debridement (with bone cultures)Re-vascularization if neededLong-term abx

Recent retrospective studies suggest abx alone May be sufficient treatment in many cases (Jeffcoate, 04)

Page 44: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

• Which antibiotics should I prescribe and for how long?

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

(www.erc.montana.edu)

Page 45: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

• Basic principles for choosing antibiotics:– Should always include coverage for Gram-positive

cocci, especially S. aureus– Add Gram-negative coverage for chronic wounds, for

patients previously treated with abx and for wounds classified as moderate to severe

– Provide anaerobic coverage for obviously necrotic wounds or those with a feculent odor

– Narrow coverage based on culture results

(Lipsky, Clin Micro Infect, 2007;13:351-53)

Page 46: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

• Basic principles for choosing antibiotics:– Consider risk factors for MRSA when choosing Gram-positive

coverage– Coverage for enterococci usually not necessary unless it is the

only organism isolated– Coverage for Pseudomonas may also not be necessary unless the

wound had been treated with hydrotherapy or Pseudomonas is present and the patient is not improving without anti-Pseudomonal treatment

– Avirulent organisms (e.g. coagulase negative staphylococci, Corynebacterium species) may become real pathogens in immunocompromised hosts with significant tissue necrosis

(Lipsky, Clin Micro Infect, 2007;13:351-53)

Page 47: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Recent Antibiotic Trials for DFI

• Ertapenam Vs Piperacillin/tazobactam (SIDESTEP) (Lipsky, Lancet, 2005;366:1695-1702)– R,DB,MCT, N=586. Mod-severe DFI (not osteo): 5 days or IV

Ertapenam or Pip/tazo - then up to 23 days of amoxacillin-clavulanic acid (could add vanco for MRSA or enterococus)

– Response rates at DCIV 94%/92%, at 10 day FUA 87%/83%– No difference between groups in those with MRSA or PsA even if not on

abx active against these organisms

• Linezolid Vs Amp-sulbactam or Amo-clavulinate (Lipsky, CID, 2004;38:17-24)– R,OL,MCT, N=371, All types of DFI: Could add Vanco for MRSA and

Aztreonam for GNR if either not covered by study medication– Response rates: L/Pcn: Overall 81%/71% (NS), Subgroups with infected

ulcer 81%/68% and those without osteo 87%/72% - both favor linezolid– More anemia and thrombocytopenia in the linezolid group - all reversible

Page 48: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Recent Antibiotic Trials for DFI• Daptomycin Vs Vancomycin or Semi-synthetic Pcn (Lipsky, JAC,

2005;55:240-45)– Randomized study, N=133, Infected ulcer (no osteo), Comparator was

Vanco if MRSA suspected, could add aztreonam for GNR and metronidazole for anaerobes

– Response rates Dapto/Comparator: Overall 66%/70% (NS), Dapto/SS-PCN 64%/70%, Dapto/Vanco 71%/69%

– Only one MRSA infection in the daptomycin group

• Moxifloxacin Vs Pip-Tazo/Amox-clav– Subset analysis of P,DB study of 617 patients: only 78 with DFI were

evaluable for cure 10-42 days after therapy– Response rates Moxi/PT-AC 68%/61%

• Piperacillin/tazobactam Vs Ampicillin/sulbactam (Harkless, Surg Infect, 2005;6:27-40)– P,R,OL,MCT, N=314, Mod-severe DFI (ulcers). If MRSA could use vanco– Response rates P-T/A-C 81% 83%

Page 49: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

(Lipsky, Clin Micro Infect, 2007;13:351-53)

Infection Pathogen Antibiotics

Mild, no previous Abx, No MRSA risks

Aerobic GPC Pcns, 1st gen cephalosporins

Mild, no previous Abx, Yes MRSA risks

Aerobic GPC + MRSA Pcns, 1st gen cephalosporins (+ TMP-SMX or doxy or clinda) OR Vancomycin OR linezolid OR daptomycin

Moderate/severe, chronic, previous Abx

GPC + GNR +/- anaerobes ß-lactam/ß-lactamase inhibitor, 2nd or 3rd gen cephalosporin, carbepenam, FQ

Necrotic, gangrenous wound, “fetid foot”

GPC + GNR + anaerobes Clinda + FQ OR metronidazole + FQ or ß-lactam/ß-lactamase inhibitor OR carbepenam

Hydrotherapy Pseudomonas Anti-Pseudomonal FQ, Pcn or Cephalosporin or Carbepenam

Page 50: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

• Duration of therapy– Mild infections 1-2 weeks– Moderate to severe infections: 2-4 weeks– Osteomyelitis: 4-6 weeks (or longer)

Page 51: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Diabetic Foot Infections

Adjuvant Therapies• G-CSF

– Cruciani, Diabetes Care, 2005;28:454460• Meta-analysis of 5 studies including 167 pateints• No effect on wound healing• Did reduce the risk for amputation (RR 0.41) and for any type of surgery

(major debridement, revascularization, angioplasty and amputation) (RR 0.38)

• Hyperbaric Oxygen– Roeckl-Wiedman, Br J Surg, 2005;92:24-32

• Meta-analysis of 6 studies, including 5 on patients with DFI (118 patients)• No effect on ulcer healing or minor amputation• Did reduce the risk of major amputation: RR 0.31

Page 52: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 6

• A 43 year old male immigrant from Pakistan reports to urgent care complaining of back pain for the last 12 months. He has lost ~15 pounds. During the last 2 weeks he noticed some mild weakness in his right leg. Examination reveals a thin, stooped, muscular male with normal vital signs. His back has a tender deformity at T6. His right knee is tender and swollen. Plain films of his T-spine show anterior wedge-shaped collapse of T6.

Page 53: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 6

www.imc.gsm

Page 54: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 6

• Differential

• Diagnostic tests:

TB > Staphylococcus > other

MRI spinePPD and CXRBlood culturesBiopsyHIVLeg films

Page 55: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 6

• MRI of his spine reveals complete destruction of T6, a 20 anterior acute angle deformity and a large para-spinal fluid collection. Biopsy reveals granulomas, no AFB.

• Does he need anti-tuberculous therapy?

• Does he need surgery?

Yes

Yes

Page 56: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 6

• What are indications for surgery in Pott’s disease?

• What about his knee?

Neurological deficitsInstabilityCervical diseaseMedical failure including non-adherence

Needs evaluationSkeletal TB more common in young people with Pott’sMedical treatment alone usually sufficientIf severe destruction with abscess - debride

Page 57: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Skeletal Tuberculosis

Pathogenesis• In developed countries skeletal TB is a disease of

adults and represents reactivation of an old focus of infection.

• In the developing world most cases of skeletal TB occur in patients who recently acquired TB. Therefore, most skeletal TB occurs in childhood. Many patients give a history of recent trauma to the involved area.

Page 58: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Skeletal Tuberculosis

Clinically • Accounts for 35% of cases of extra-pulmonary TB

and 2% of all cases of TB• Indolent course, average duration of symptoms

prior to diagnosis: 16 to 19 months.• Local swelling, pain, fluctuance; systemic

symptoms (fever, sweats, etc) often absent.• Pulmonary disease present in 30%. PPD+ in >

85%

Page 59: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Skeletal Tuberculosis

Clinically • Pott’s disease (tuberculous spondylitis)

– Responsible for 1/3 of cases of skeletal TB.

– Infection begins in the anterior aspect of the vertebral body leading to anterior collapse and spread of the infection along the anterior ligament

– Most cases involve the lumber and lower thoracic spine

– 50% of cases have associated abscesses (if calcified is diagnostic for TB)

Page 60: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Skeletal Tuberculosis

www.imc.gsm.com www.path.sunysb.edu

Page 61: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Skeletal Tuberculosis

Clinically • Pott’s disease

– 50% have weakness or paralysis at the time of presentation or during Rx

– 50% associated with disc involvement

– 50% without disc involvement are younger and more likely to have other skeletal lesions

– 77% have epidural involvement by MRI (Pertuiset, 1999)

Page 62: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Skeletal Tuberculosis

Clinically • Other bones: any bone; weight bearing, flat, ribs -

relatively unique to TB

Diagnosis• AFB stain and culture of biopsy specimen

(sensitivity ~85%)

Page 63: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Skeletal Tuberculosis

Treatment• Chemotherapy: Duration - 9 to 18 months.

Although recent studies suggest that 6 months of treatment, when combined with surgery, is as effective as longer course of antibiotics.

• Debridement of abscesses will lead to faster resolution and less kyphosis in those with severe disease at presentation.

Page 64: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Skeletal Tuberculosis

Treatment• Criteria for surgical intervention in Pott’s

– Neurological deficit

– Spinal instability

– Cervical spine disease

– Failure of medical therapy

– Non-adherence to medical therapy.

Page 65: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 7

• A 43 year old female with a long history of rheumatoid arthritis requiring multiple joint replacements complains to her rheumatologist of a flare of her disease with pain and swelling in one of her IP joints and her right wrist. Her temperature is 37.5C, her right wrist is warm, swollen and red as is one of her IP joints on the same hand.

• Why isn't this just a flare of her RA?

• How would you differentiate infected from non-infected joint fluid?

Too few joints

Aspiration: Gram stain 50-75%, Culture 90%, BC 50%

Page 66: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 7

• What is the bug?

• Which antibiotics would you use and for how long?

• Do the joints need to be drained? How?

S. aureus - 80% in RA

Anti-staph (anti-MRSA?), 4 to 6 weeks

YesSerial aspiration or open procedure

Page 67: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 7

• What are indications for open drainage?

Hips, shoulders, prosthetic jointsOsteomyelitis with arthritisGNRWhen aspiration fails (thick pus)

Page 68: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 8

• A 23 year old female reports to the ER with 2 days of diffuse arthralgias, low grade fever and then the development of swelling and increased pain in her right knee and wrist. She has a new boyfriend.

• Diagnosis?

• What do you find on exam?

• Is the patient likely to be menstruating?

GC > reactive arthritis

Skin lesions (< 30), tenosynovitis, additive oligoarthritis

Yes; risks for DGI: certain strains of GC, F > M, menses, complement deficiency

Page 69: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 8

• Is she likely to have genital symptoms?

• Will BC grow the organism? Joint fluid? Cervical culture?

• Should her joints be drained? Open drainage?

• Antibiotic therapy: drugs, route, duration?

• Should anyone else be treated?

No (strains that don’t fix complement - less inflammation)

< 20% ~50% > 80%

Yes, Usually not necessary

Ceftriaxone until better (~2 d), then cefixime or Quinolone (if quinolone susceptible) for 7-10 days

Partner

Page 70: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 9

• The ex-boyfriend of the last patient is treated as a contact. Two weeks later he reports to urgent care with pain in his toes, right knee and left hip area. He also complains of a little dysuria. Exam reveals 2 sausage digits on his right foot, a swollen, warm right knee and pain and decreased range of motion of his left hip.

• Differential diagnosis?

• Would you order any imaging studies? GC or reactive arthritis

MRI of hip

Page 71: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 9

• Would you tap his knee? His hip? His hip and knee?

• Antibiotics? Which ones? Until when?

• Would you culture anything else?

• What makes you think this is not a bacterial infection?

Yes Yes Yes

Anti-staph, strep, GC (e,g., ceftriaxone) - until cultures neg

Urethral and oral cultures

Sausage digitsMultiple sites (RA or GC > strep or staph)Negative cultures

Page 72: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 9

• Two days later he is no better and all the cultures are negative.

• How would you treat him now?

• How likely is he to HLA-B27 positive?

• Is he likely to relapse?

• Are antibiotics of any use in this disease?

• What are other risk factors for this syndrome?

Anti-inflammatories (sulfasalazine, NSAIDS, steroids)

Post CT: > 90%, post enteric infections: 50-80%

Sure, more common post CT

Doxy or macrolides for RA post CT - maybe, otherwise - No

After any enteric infection, IBD

Page 73: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 10• A 37 year old male roofer sustained a T12-S1

fracture/dislocation due to a fall. His spine was initially stabilized with rods, plates and screws. Eight weeks post-operation he was diagnosed with osteomyelitis due to S. aureus and CNS. This infection was treated by debridement of necrotic tissue and bone, removal of almost all the original hardware and immediate replacement with new hardware and a tibial allograft. The patient also received 3 months of appropriate antibiotics (vancomycin, ciprofloxacin and rifampin).

• He did well for 8 months, joined a wheelchair basketball team and then began noticing pain in his back, made worse by a rigorous game of hoops. His surgeon thinks (hopes) his pain is due to his recent increased activity but orders an ESR (32 mm/hr) and a CT (lots of post-operative changes but no obvious osteomyelitis).

Page 74: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 10

• What diagnostic tests might you order now?

• Was it a mistake to replace the infected hardware with new hardware at the same operation?

• What about the placement of the tibial allograft?

• What treatment strategy would you recommend at this point?

MRI-CT with WBC scan: Specificity 90%, PPV ~90%

Best to avoid this but in some cases not avoidable due to stabilization issues (spine)

Theoretically a bad idea (adding sequestrum!)Nevertheless, some support in the surgical literature (Shuster)

Remove hardware, antibiotics

Page 75: Bone and Joint Infections July, 2009 Case 1 A 12 year old female soccer player sustained a nasty bruise below her R knee during a particularly physical.

Case 10

• The patient refuses any further treatment or work-up. A month later a draining sinus develops at the site of the original injury. The patient takes some antibiotics he had stashed at home and the sinus dries up. The infection intermittently flares over the next 15 years and each time it does the patient takes a short course of antibiotics that temporarily solves the problem. However, the most recent episode of drainage has not responded to his usual remedy and he comes back to see you. Your examination of his spine reveals an 8 cm area of tough, indurated skin with a necrotic, bleeding center draining green, purulent material.

• What are you worried about?

• What do you recommend?

Recurrent, resistant infection, squamous cell cancer

Image, debride, biopsy