Septic arthritis

Revision as of 20:38, 27 February 2012 by Jswartz (talk | contribs)

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
  • Gonococcal arthritis is commonest cause in adolescents and young adults

Clinical Features

  • Fever
  • Warm, red, painful, swollen joint
  • Decreased range of motion to active and passive movement
  • Gonococcal arthritis may have prodromal phase:
    • Migratory arthritis and tenosynovitis predominate before pain and swelling occurs

Diagnosis

  • Arthrocentesis for synoval fluid
Normal Noninflammatory Inflammatory Septic
Clarity Transparent Transparent Cloudy Cloudy
Color Clear Yellow Yellow Yellow
WBC <200 <200-2000 200-50,000 >25,000
PMN <25% <25% >50% >90%
Culture Neg Neg Neg >50% positive
Crystals None None Multiple or none None

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
  2. CBC
  3. ESR
    1. Sn 96% (with 30mm/h cut-off)
  4. Blood Culture
  5. Gonorrhea culture (urethral/cervical/pharyngeal/rectal)
  6. Imaging
    1. Helpful for excluding other diagnoses (e.g. trauma, osteo)

Treatment

  1. Joint drainage
  2. Abx
    1. Gram stain can be used to guide treatment
      1. Gram+: vancomycin IV
      2. Gram- OR gonococcus suspected: Ceftriaxone IV
  3. Consult ortho for joint irrigation in OR if joint aspirate is indicative of infection

Disposition

  • Admit all to ortho

See Also

Source

  • Tintinalli