Arthrocentesis
Indications
Diagnosis
- suspicion of septic arthritis, crystal induced arthritis
- evaluation of therapeutic response for septic arthritis
- unexplained arthritis with synovial effusion
Relative Indications
Therapeutic (decrease intra-articular pressure, injection of anesthetics/steroids)
Contraindications
- No absolute contraindications for diagnostic arthrocentesis
- do not inject steroids into a joint that you suspect or know to be infected
- Relative Contraindications:
- coagulopathy
- local or systemic infection
- Joint prosthesis (refer to ortho)
Equipment Needed
- Betadine or Chlorhexadine
- Sterile Gloves/drape
- sterile gauze
- Lidocaine
- Syringes
- small syringe (6-12cc) for injection of local anesthetic
- Large (one 60cc or 2 30cc) syringe for aspiration
- Needles
- 18 gauges
- 27 gauge
- Collection tubes (red tops)
- Culture bottles
- adhesive bandage
Procedure
- Position the patient in a way so that they are comfortable and so you have easy access to the joint that you are going to tap (see below for positioning pearls)
- Prep the area with betadine or chlorhexadine using circular motion moving away from the joint x 3. Drape the joint in a sterile fashion
- Inject lidocaine superficially and then into the deeper tissues
- Confirm landmarks and then insert the needle into the joint space while you are simultaneously pulling back on the plunger of the syringe. Stop once you aspirate fluid and aspirate as much fluid as possible (you may need to replace the syringe multiple times to get larger volumes)
- Once fluid is removed, remove the needle and apply adhesive bandage
Approach
Shoulder
- anterior approach: have patient sitting with should in external rotation. Insert needle anteriorly below the tip of the coracoid medial to the humeral head directing it posterolaterally
- posterior approach: same as anterior approach except needle is inserted on the posterior side of the shoulder
Elbow
- Have patient sitting with elbow in 90 degrees of flexion, forearm pronated, palm facing downward
- insert needle within triangle bounded by radial head, lateral humeral epicondyle, and olecranon directing it toward the medial epicondyle
Wrist
- 3-4 portal approach: have wrist in slight flexion and ulnar deviation. Insert needle dorsally just distal to Lister's tubercle (bony prominence over the dorsum of the distal radius) and ulnar to the extensor pollicus longus
Metacarpophalangeal
- have palm facing down and apply gentle traction to the affected digit
- insert needle dorsally just medial or lateral to midline and proximal to the base of the proximal phalanx
Interphalangeal
- have palm facing down and apply gentle traction to the affected digit
- insert needle dorsally medial or lateral to midline and proximal to base of middle or distal phalanx
Knee
- Inferior-medial approach: knee flexed at 90 degrees and needle inserted between patella tendon, medial femoral condyle, and medial tibial plateau
- Medial approach: knee extended and needle inserted 1-2cm medial to patella just distal to proximal edge of the patella directing it posteriorly beneath the patella
Ankle
- plantarflex the ankle and locate the medial malleolus and anterior tibialis tendon
- Insert needle 1/2 inch above medial malleolus, 1/2 inch lateral to anterior edge of medial malleolus, and medial to the anterior tibialis tendon advancing it posteriorly
Metatarsophalangeal
- patient supine with flexion of the MTP joint 15-20 degrees and apply gentle traction
- insert needle dorsally just medial or lateral to midline between the metatarsal head and base of proximal phalanx
Interphalangeal
- patient supine with joint flexed 15-20 degrees with gentle traction
- insert needle dorsally, medial or lateral to midline between head of proximal phalanx and base of more distal phalanx
Complications
- pain
- infection
- reaccumulation of effusion
- damage to tendons, nerves, or blood vessels
