Septic arthritis: Difference between revisions

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{{Septic Arthritis Antibiotics}}
{{Septic Arthritis Antibiotics}}


===Consultation===
==Consultation==
Consult ortho for joint irrigation in OR if joint aspirate is indicative of infection
Consult ortho for joint irrigation in OR if joint aspirate is indicative of infection



Revision as of 19:26, 6 April 2015

Background

  • Most important diagnostic consideration in acute joint pain (can destroy joint in days)
  • Knee most commonly involved in adults; hip most common in peds
  • Most often seen in pts >65yr
  • Most common causative organisms
    • <35 y/o N. gonorrhoeae
    • >35 y/o S. aureus

Clinical Features

  • Fever
  • Warm, red, painful, swollen joint
  • Decreased range of motion to active and passive movement
  • Gonococcal arthritis
    • Urethritis/vaginitis may be absent
    • may have prodromal phase:
      • Migratory arthritis and tenosynovitis predominate before pain and swelling occurs
      • Macularpapular rash or pustules esp on hands/feet may proceed overt arthritis
  • Endocarditis should be considered in the presence of 2 or more affected joints

Diagnosis

Arthrocentesis of synoval fluid

Synovium Normal Noninflammatory Inflammatory Septic
Clarity Transparent Transparent Cloudy Cloudy
Color Clear Yellow Yellow Yellow
WBC <200 <200-2000 200-50,000

>1,100 (prosthetic joint)

>25,000; LR=2.9

>50,000; LR=7.7

>100,000; LR=28

PMN <25% <25% >50%

>64% (prosthetic joint)

>90%

Culture Neg Neg Neg >50% positive
Lactate <5.6 mmol/L <5.6 mmol/L <5.6 mmol/L >5.6 mmol/L
LDH <250 <250 <250 >250
Crystals None None Multiple or none None
  • Viscosity of synovial fluid may actually be decreased in inflammatory or infectious etiologies, as hyaluronic acid concentrations decrease
  • The presence of crystals does not rule out septic arthritis; however, the diagnosis is highly unlikely with synovial WBC < 50,000[1]

DDx

  1. Toxic synovitis
  2. Abscess
  3. Cellulitis
  4. Primary rheumatologic disorder (i.e. vasculitis)
  5. Iatrogenic
  6. Reactive arthritis (post-infectious)

Work-Up

  1. Arthrocentesis with synovial fluid analysis
    1. Synovial fluid culture only (not 100% sensitive)
  2. CBC
  3. ESR
    1. Sn 94% (with 15mm/h cut-off)[2]
  4. CRP
    1. Sn 92% (with 20mg/L cut-off)
  5. Blood Culture
  6. Gonorrhea culture (urethral/cervical/pharyngeal/rectal)
  7. Imaging
    1. Helpful for excluding other diagnoses (e.g. trauma, osteo)
  8. Immunocompromised
    1. Consider mycobacterial or fungal arthritis

Treatment

Arthrocentesis

  • Treatment based on diagnostic studies

Antibiotics

For adults treatment should be divided into Gonococcal and Non-Gonococcal

Gonococcal

Non-Gonococcal

Pediatrics

Sickle Cell

Coverage for Salmonella and Staphylococcus spp

  • Vancomycin 20mg/kg IV twice daily PLUS
    • Ciprofloxacin 400mg IV three times daily OR
    • Imipenem/cilastatin 1g IV three times daily

Consultation

Consult ortho for joint irrigation in OR if joint aspirate is indicative of infection

Disposition

  • Admit all to ortho

External Links

See Also

Source

  1. Shah K, Spear J, Nathanson LA, Mccauley J, Edlow JA. Does the presence of crystal arthritis rule out septic arthritis?. J Emerg Med. 2007;32(1):23-6.
  2. Hariharan, H, et al. Sensitivity of Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate and C-reactive Protein for the Exclusion of Septic Arthritis in Emergency Department Patients. J of Emerg Med. 2010; 40(4):428–431. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jemermed.2010.05.029
  • Tintinalli