Prosthetic joint infection Flashcards

1
Q

What are is the epidemiology of TKR and THR joint infections?

A
  • 1-2% following primary TKR
  • 6% following revision TKR
  • 0.3%-1.3% following primary THR
  • 3% following revision THR
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2
Q

What are the risk factors for Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • Immunosupressants drugs
    • anti- TNF agents
    • antimetabolites- Methotrexate/leflunomide
    • Corticosteriods
  • Immunosuppressant conditions- dysplasia/neoplasia
  • Perioperative surgical site infection
  • poor wound healing
  • RA
  • Psorasis
  • Diabetes
  • Smoking
  • Obesity
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3
Q

What are the organisms involved in Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • most common
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Staphylococcus epidemidis
  • Coagulase negative staphylococcus ( chronic infection)
  • Most common fungal
    • Candida species
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4
Q

How do you prevent Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • Antibiotic administration within 30 mins of incision and cotinued for 24 hrs after surgery- most effective
  • Vertical laminar flow systems in operating rooms
  • antibiotics prior dental work is cost -effcetive for 2 years following major joint replacement
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5
Q

What is the classification of Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • Acute
    • infection within 3 weeks of Joint replacement
    • usually confined to joint space
    • Staph aureus/ B haemolytic strep/Gram- neg
  • Chronic
    • ​infection > 3 weeks
    • Biofilm created by all bacterial forms on implant by 4 weeks
      • ​15% cells and 85% polysacchardie layer ( glycocalyx)
      • Glycocalyx allows biofilm to adhere to prothesis and seal off infection and protect from host immune system
      • = bacteria to become 1000 x more resistant
      • infection invaded prosthetic- bone interface
      • coag neg staphylococcus most common
  • Haematogenous seeding
    • infection in a longstanding infection-free joint secondary to another infection ( dental work/gallbladder)
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6
Q

What is the presentation of Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • Pain on site of arthroplasty assoc with infection >90% pts
  • acute onset swelling, erytherma, warmth and tenderness
  • chronic- function and pain worsens over time

O/E

  • sinus tract joint is a definite infection
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7
Q

What is seen on imaging of Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • Xray
    • Periosteal reaction
    • scattered patches of osteolysis
    • generalised bone rebsorption without implant wear
  • Bone scan
    • Tc99m detects inflammation, In-111 ( indium) detects leucocytes
    • 99% sensitive, 30-40% specific
  • PET- positron emission tomography
    • identifies areas of high metabolic activity using fluorinated glucose
    • sensitive 98%, specific 98%
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8
Q

What lab studies are helpful in Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • WBC
    • >10,700 cells/ul <4 wks from surgery
    • >1760 cells /ul >4 wks from surgery
  • ESR/CRP
    • CRP takes 21 days to return to normal post surgery
    • ESR takes 90 days to return to normal post surgery
    • If remain elevated or increase- concern
  • IL-6
    • greatest correlation with Prosthetic joint infections
  • Joint aspiration
    • Synovial WBC >1,110 cells/ml
    • PMN >64%
  • ​Microbiology
    • ​definitive dx made if same organism found on 3-5 periprosthetic specimens obtained at surgery
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9
Q

What is the tx of Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • Non operative tx
    • Suppressive antibiotic therapy
      • pts unfit for surgery/refyse surgery
      • Goal is to prevent systemic infection
      • 10-25% success rate with eradication
      • 8%-21% complx rate
  • ​​Operative
    1. ​PE exchange, debridement , irrigation with component retention, iv ab for 4-6 wks
      • acute infections <4 wks, early haematogenous infection <4 wks
      • 80-90% successful outcome
    2. One stage revision replacement arthroplasty
      • ​low virulence organism and know sensitivities
      • no bone graft/healthy pt
      • antibiotic loaded cement
      • adv
        • lower cost and convience of single procedure
        • early mobility
      • Dis
        • higher risk of continued infection from residual organisms
      • variable success 75-100%​​​​​
    3. ​Two stage replacement
      • ​​gold standard for infected joints >4 /52
      • medically fit for multiple operations
      • Requires adequate bone stock
      • prosthesis removal, antibitoic spacer, Iv antibiotics 4-6 wks and delayed reconstruction
      • delayed implanation>6 wks success 70-90% cf 2 weeks 35% success
    4. ​Resection Arthroplasty
      • ​elderly,non ambulatory, recurrent infections, failure of reimplanation
      • total knee success 50-89%
      • Total hip success 60-100%
      • Dis: short limb, poor function, pt dissatisfaction
    5. Arhrodesis
      • if remimplantaton not feasible
      • outcomes 71-95% success rate
    6. Amputation
      • AKA transfemoral amputation for infected TKR
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10
Q

What are the adv and dis of cement spacers?

A
  • Adv
    • reduce joint dead space
    • provide stability
    • deliver high dose antibiotics
  • Disc
    • potential local or systemic allergic reaction
    • increase chance of developing antibiotic resistant organisms
    • only heat stable antibtiotics can be added to cement
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11
Q

What type and amount of antibiotic can be added to cement for a spacer?

A
  • each 40g bag of cement should have 3g of vancomycin and 4g of Tobramycin added
  • Gentamycin can be subsituted for tobramycin
  • elution of antibiotics depends on cement porosity, surface area ( beads increase area) and antibiotic concentration
  • must use heat stabilised antibiotics- vanc, gent, tobramycin
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12
Q

What antibiotics should be used in Prosthetic joint infections?

A
  • 1st generation cephalosporin
  • vancomycin
    • if pencillin allergic
    • priod hx exposure to mrsa
    • unidentified organism
  • Tailor regimen based on microorganism & susceptibility testing
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