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Chronic non-specific infection of bone and joint

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Title: Chronic non-specific infection of bone and joint


1
  • Chronic non-specific infection of bone and joint

2
Chronic osteomyelitis
3
  • Chronic osteomyelitis
  • is a severe, persistent, and sometimes
    incapacitating infection of bone and bone marrow.
    It is often a recurring condition because it is
    difficult to treat definitively.

4
  • This disease may result from
  • (1) inadequately treated acute OSM (2) a
    hematogenous type of osteomyelitis (3) trauma,
    (4) iatrogenic causes such as joint replacements
    and the internal fixation of fractures (5)
    compound fractures (6) infection with organisms,
    such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Treponema
    species (syphilis) and (7) contiguous spread
    from soft tissues, as in diabetic ulcers or
    ulcers in peripheral vascular disease

5
  • Pathophysiology
  • Infective process
  • Osteomyelitis is an infective process involving
    all osseous components, including bone marrow.
    Chronic osteomyelitis results when the
    inflammatory process continues over time, leading
    to bone sclerosis and deformity.
  • The ends of long bones are the most common locus
    of infection, and Staphylococcus aureus is the
    most common infective organism involved.
    Traumatic fractures or previous surgery may be
    responsible creating the access for infection,
    which may also originate from sepsis in the
    hematogenous form.

6
Pathophysiology
Infection at the bone locus creates an increase
of intramedullary pressure due to inflam matory
exudate that strips the periosteum, leading to
vascular thrombosis followed by bone necrosis and
the formation of sequestra. Usually, necrosis of
the large segments of bone leads to sequestrum
formation. These sequestra with infected material
are surrounded by sclerotic bone that is
relatively avascular. The haversian canals are
blocked with scar tissue, and the bone is
surrounded by thickened periosteum and scarred
muscle. Antibiotics cannot penetrate these
relatively avascular tissues and are hence
ineffective in clearing the infection. New bone
formation occurs at the same time (involucrum).
Multiple openings appear in this involucrum,
through which exudates and debris from the
sequestrum pass via the sinuses. A periosteal
reaction acts to circumscribe the sequestrum,
producing a thick sheet of new bone or involucrum.
7
  • Organisms Commonly Isolated in Osteomyelitis
    Infants (lt1 year) Group B streptococci
    Staphylococcus aureus Escherichia coli
    Children (1 to 16 years) S. aureus
    Streptococcus pyogenes Haemophilus influenzae
    Adults (gt16 years) Staphylococcus epidermidis
    S. aureus Pseudomonas aeruginosa Serratia
    marcescens E. coli

8
  • Organism Comments
  • Staphylococcus aureus   Organism most often
    isolated in all types of osteomyelitis
    Coagulase-negative staphylococci or
    Propionibacterium species   Foreign-bodyassociate
    d infection Enterobacteriaceae species or
    Pseudomonas aeruginosa   Common in nosocomial
    infections Streptococci or anaerobic bacteria  
    Associated with bites, fist injuries caused by
    contact with another person's mouth, diabetic
    foot lesions, decubitus ulcers Salmonella species
    or Streptococcus pneumoniae
  •   Sickle cell disease Bartonella henselae   Human
    immunodeficiency virus infection Pasteurella
    multocida or Eikenella corrodens   Human or
    animal bites Aspergillus species, Mycobacterium
    avium-intracellulare or Candida albicans  
    Immunocompromised patients Mycobacterium
    tuberculosis   Populations in which tuberculosis
    is prevalent Brucella species, Coxiella burnetii
    (cause of chronic Q fever) or other fungi found
    in specific geographic c

9
  • Anatomy
  • Cierny and Mader proposed an anatomic
    classification of chronic osteomyelitis
  • Type 1 - Endosteal or medullary lesion
  • Type 2 - Superficial osteomyelitis limited to the
    surface
  • Type 3 - Localized, well-marked legion with
    sequestration and cavity formation
  • Type 4 - Diffuse osteomyelitis lesions

10
  • Physiologic Factors affecting immune
    surveillance metabolism and local vascularity -
    Systemic factors (Bs) malnutrition, renal or
    hepatic failure, diabetes mellitus, chronic
    hypoxia, immune disease, extremes of age,
    immunosuppression or immune deficiency - Local
    factors (Bl) chronic lymphedema, venous stasis,
    major vessel compromise, arteritis, extensive
    scarring, radiation fibrosis, small-vessel
    disease, neuropathy, tobacco abuse

11
  • Frequency
  • United States
  • The prevalence of chronic osteomyelitis is 5-25
    after an episode of acute osteomyelitis. The
    prevalence of tuberculous osteomyelitis is 1-5
    of the population affected by tuberculosis. The
    incidence in developed countries is low.
  • International
  • The incidence in developing countries is higher
    than in other countries, although the exact
    incidence is not known.
  • Mortality/Morbidity
  • Mortality from osteomyelitis was 5-25 in the
    preantibiotic era. Presently, the mortality rate
    is approaching 0.
  • Complications of osteomyelitis include (1) septic
    arthritis, (2) destruction of the adjacent soft
    tissues, (3) malignant transformation (eg,
    Marjolin ulcer squamous cell carcinoma,
    epidermoid carcinoma of the sinus tract), (4)
    secondary amyloidoses, and (5) pathologic
    fractures

12
Clinical presentation
  • chronic forms of osteomyelitis usually occur in
    adults. Generally, these bone infections are
    secondary to an open wound, most often an open
    injury to bone and surrounding soft tissue.
    Localized bone pain, erythema and drainage around
    the affected area are frequently present. The
    cardinal signs of subacute and chronic
    osteomyelitis include draining sinus tracts,
    deformity, instability and local signs of
    impaired vascularity, range of motion and
    neurologic status. The incidence of deep
    musculoskeletal infection from open fractures has
    been reported to be as high as 23 percent.6
    Patient factors, such as altered neutrophil
    defense, humoral immunity and cell-mediated
    immunity, can increase the risk of osteomyelitis

13
  • Presentation
  • Unlike acute osteomyelitis, chronic osteomyelitis
    causes no acute constitutional symptoms. The
    presenting features may be those of a
    long-standing, discharging sinus or chronic bone
    pain and persist despite treatment. Patients may
    also present with acute exacerbations and usually
    have a previous history of acute osteomyelitis,
    sometimes dating back to childhood. Other
    symptoms include deep boring pain, especially in
    cases of a Brodie abscess. In osteomyelitis that
    occurs after joint replacement, the main symptom
    is the recurrence of pain.
  • Findings in tuberculosis include the following
  • History of tuberculosis elsewhere
  • Attacks of fever and lassitude
  • Night cries
  • Intense episodes of pain in the affected bones
  • Muscle wasting, synovial thickening, and
    restriction of joint movement in all directions
  • Kyphosis, back pain, and symptoms and signs of
    spinal cord compression in spinal tuberculosis
  • Findings in syphilis include the following
  • Pain, refusal to move the affected limb
  • Restriction of movement in an adjacent joint
  • Pain in the bone
  • Local swelling, redness, and warmth

14
  • Fever
  • Nausea
  • General discomfort, uneasiness, or ill feeling
    (malaise)
  • Drainage of pus through the skin (in chronic
    osteomyelitis)
  • Additional symptoms that may be associated with
    this osteomyelitis include the following
  • Excessive sweating
  • Chills
  • Low back pain
  • Swelling of the ankles, feet, and legs
  • Physical examination shows bone tenderness and,
    possibly, swelling and redness.
  • During laboratory testing, a full blood count may
    show leukocytosis. The erythrocyte sedimentation
    rate (ESR) is elevated. Blood cultures may help
    identify the causative organism.
  • Results of bone lesion biopsy and cultures may be
    positive for the organism. A skin lesion with a
    sinus tract (ie, the lesion tunnels under the
    tissues) may yield pus for culturing.

15
  • Diagnosis
  • The diagnosis of osteomyelitis is based primarily
    on the clinical findings, with data from the
    initial history, physical examination and
    laboratory tests serving primarily as benchmarks
    against which treatment response is measured.
    Leukocytosis and elevations in the erythrocyte
    sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein level
    may be noted. Blood cultures are positive in up
    to one half of children with acute osteomyelitis.
  • The palpation of bone in the depths of infected
    pedal ulcers in patients with diabetes mellitus
    is strongly correlated with the presence of
    underlying osteomyelitis (sensitivity, 66
    percent specificity, 85 percent positive
    predictive value, 89 percent negative predictive
    value, 56 percent).7 If bone is palpated, the
    evaluation may proceed directly to microbiologic
    and histologic confirmation of osteomyelitis, and
    thereafter to treatment. Further diagnostic
    studies are unnecessary.
  • chronic stage of hematogenous osteomyelitis is
    known as a Brodie's abscess.

16
  • Histopathologic and microbiologic examination of
    bone is the gold standard for diagnosing
    osteomyelitis

17
  • microbiologic examination
  • Cultures of sinus tract samples are not reliable
    for identifying causative organisms. Therefore,
    biopsy is advocated to determine the etiology of
    osteomyelitis.14 However, the accuracy of biopsy
    is often limited by lack of uniform specimen
    collection and previous antibiotic use

18
  • Laboratory Investigations
  • CBC with differential
  • Elevated WBC count
  • Left shift Polymorphonucleocytosis
  • Blood cultures
  • ESR (Normal lt 20 mm/hr)
  • Usually elevated gt 35mm
  • C-Reactive Protein (Normal lt 8 - 10mg/L)
  • Elevated gt 10mg/L

19
Diagnostic Imaging
  • Plain Radiographs
  • Ultrasound
  • Radionuclide (Bone) Scans
  • C-T Scans
  • M R I

20
  • Radiography
  • Findings
  • Plain radiographic
  • findings in acute or subacute osteomyelitis are
    deep soft-tissue swelling, a periosteal reaction,
    cortical irregularity, and demineralization. The
    chronic phase of the disease is characterized by
    thick, irregular, sclerotic bone interspersed
    with radiolucencies, an elevated periosteum, and
    chronic draining sinuses.
  • Sclerosing osteomyelitis of Garré most commonly
    affects the mandible and appears with a focal
    sclerosing periosteal reaction on radiologic
    studies.
  • Chronic recurrent osteomyelitis is benign
    self-limiting condition that primarily affects
    long bones in children and adolescents. The
    metaphysis of long bones are usually affected,
    and changes may be symmetrical. The appearances
    are those of confluent areas of bone lysis.
  • .
  • False Positives/Negatives
  • Stress fractures, osteoid osteomas, and other
    causes of periosteitis may mimic acute or chronic
    osteomyelitis.

21
Osteomyelitis, chronic. Sequestrum of the lower
tibia
22
Osteomyelitis, chronic. Sclerosing osteomyelitis
of the lower tibia. Note the bone expansion and
marked sclerosis.
23
Sequelae of Osteomyelitis Chronic Sinus
Intermittent drainage Sequestrum Dead
bone (sclerotic) Failure to resorb
Involucrum New bone envelope Pathologic
fracture
24
  • Computed Tomography
  • CT is of definite value for studying the entire
    articular surface of bone and periarticular soft
    tissues for delineating the extent of medullary
    and soft-tissue involvement and for
    demonstrating cavities, serpiginous tracts,
    sequestra, or cloacae in osteomyelitis.
  • CT scans sometimes show soft-tissue edema or bone
    destruction not seen on plain images,
    particularly in the setting of acute
    osteomyelitis. Sclerosis, demineralization, and
    periosteal reactions are usually well depicted in
    chronic osteomyelitis.
  • CT scanning also helps in evaluating the need for
    surgery, and it provides vital information about
    the extent of disease. This data helps in
    planning appropriate surgery. CT is also an
    important modality in image-guided biopsy.
  • False Positives/Negatives
  • Stress fractures, osteoid osteomas, and other
    causes of periosteitis may mimic acute or chronic
    osteomyelitis

25
Osteomyelitis, chronic. Axial CT scans show
destruction of L1. Note the air in the soft
tissues
26
Osteomyelitis, chronic. CT scans show vertebral
osteomyelitis associated with a psoas abscess
27
Osteomyelitis, chronic. Nonenhanced axial CT
scans through the first and second toes in the
same patient as in Images 5-7 shows cortical
irregularity of the distal phalanx of the hallux
this finding is suggestive of chronic
osteomyelitis. The final diagnosis was
osteomyelitis of the first and second toes,
plantar fasciitis, and psoriatic arthritis of the
fifth metatarsal-phalangeal joint.
28
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Findings
  • MRI findings in osteomyelitis are usually
    secondary to the replacement of marrow fat with
    water secondary to edema, exudate, hyperemia, and
    bone ischemia. Findings include the following
    decreased signal intensity in the involved bone
    on T1-weighted images, increased signal intensity
    in the involved bone on T2-weighted image, and
    increased signal intensity in the involved bone
    on short-tau inversion recovery (STIR) images.
  • Sequestrum of cortical bone appears hypointense
    on T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and STIR MRIs and
    shows no gadolinium enhancement. Sequestrum of
    cancellous bone is hyperintense relative to
    cortical sequestrum on T1-weighted, T2-weighted,
    and STIR MRIs and shows no gadolinium
    enhancement. The involucrum is hypointense on all
    3 images and shows gadolinium enhancement.
  • Granulation tissue is hypointense on T1-weighted
    images and hyperintense on T2-weighted and STIR
    images. It shows gadolinium enhancement.
    Similarly, draining sinuses and soft-tissue
    inflammation are hypointense on T1-weighted
    images and hyperintense on T2-weighted and STIR
    MRIs however, it does show gadolinium
    enhancement.
  • .

29
Osteomyelitis, chronic. T1- and T2-weighted
sagittal MRIs show bone marrow edema in L1 and
obliteration of the disk space between L1 and L2
30
Contrast Gadolinium Enhancement
Gadolinium enhanced
T2 Weighted Image
31
MRI Gold Standard Soft tissue bony changes
Changes appear early Accurately
localizes subperiosteal or soft
tissue collections Sensitivity of 100 for
bone marrow edema No ionizing radiation
Disadvantages Cost Need for sedation in
most infants and children
32
  • Degree of Confidence
  • MRI has sensitivity and specificity higher than
    those of plain radiography and CT, and it is
    particularly good at depicting bone marrow
    abnormalities. On MRI, marrow signal abnormality
    is more sensitive than lytic changes on plain
    images, and findings become positive earlier with
    MRI than with radiography. Intramedullary bone
    pathology can be directly visualized with MRI,
    and in osteomyelitis marrow, these findings may
    precede bone changes.
  • reaction and associated soft-tissue involvement

33
  • The multiplanar capability of MRI is an advantage
    and provides better anatomic detail and better
    soft-tissue contrast. MRI is especially good in
    assessing vertebral osteomyelitis, which has a
    characteristic pattern of confluent vertebral
    body and disk involvement. Titanium and other
    orthopedic devises usually pose no problem apart
    from artifacts.
  • However, MRI findings of osteomyelitis are
    nonspecific, and similar changes can occur as a
    result of tumors, fractures, and a variety of
    other intramedullary or juxtamedullary processes
    that may cause bone marrow edema. The sensitivity
    and specificity has been reported as 92-100 and
    89-100, respectively. Prior fracture changes due
    to surgery or the fracture itself are difficult
    to differentiate from infection.
  • False Positives/Negatives
  • Fractures, bone bruises, and benign or malignant
    bone tumors may all mimic osteomyelitis.

34
  • Ultrasonography
  • Findings
  • Cleveland and Peck reported a case in which
    high-resolution ultrasonography was instrumental
    in establishing a diagnosis of chronic
    osteomyelitis. Sonograms depicted a periosteal

35
Nuclear Imaging Gallium-67 scanning. Technetium-99
m diphosphonate bone scanning A99m Tc methylene
diphosphonate (MDP) bone scans are usually
positive 24 hours after an acute infection, and
the scans demonstrate a well-defined focus of
tracer activity 1-2 hours after the injection.
This finding is correlated with radiotracer in
same area on dynamic scans. Bone scintigraphy may
show focal uptake at the affected site and is
particularly valuable in looking for other sites
of infection, as multifocal osteomyelitis may
occur. MDP scans also remain positive in most
patients with subacute and chronic osteomyelitis.
Increased focal activity may persist in sterile
disease for up to 2 years following successful
therapy. The sensitivity of MDP scans can be
improved by using a 3-phase bone scan. On such
scans, focal activity is usually depicted
associated with mild, diffusely increased,
regional activity distal to the sight of
osteomyelitis. Occasionally, a photon deficient
(cold) defects are seen.
36
Osteomyelitis, chronic. Radiograph (left) and
isotopic bone scans (right) show sclerosing
osteomyelitis of the tibia
37
Radionuclide Imaging Bone Scan Technetium
diphosphonate New bone formation (osteoid)
Reflects osteoblastic activity Higher
sensitivity with longer duration of illness
Bone Scan can be -ve Very early osteomyelitis
Absent blood supply Neonates have
less mineralization (30 sensitivity) Useful
for occult multifocal lesions
38
Osteomyelitis, chronic. Three-phase
technetium-99m diphosphonate bone scans
(perfusion component) show increased activity in
the whole of the heel, the tarsus, the proximal
and distal phalanges of the hallux, and the
proximal phalanx of the second toe
39
Osteomyelitis, chronic. Indium-111labeled WBC
scans show an infected right-knee prosthesis
40
Bone scans, both anterior (A) and lateral (B),
showing the accumulation of radioactive tracer at
the right ankle (arrow). This focal accumulation
is characteristic of osteomyelitis
41
  • Treatment
  • Chronic osteomyelitis in adults is more
    refractory to therapy
  • and is generally treated with antibiotics and
    surgical debridement. Empiric antibiotic therapy
    is not usually recommended. Depending on the type
    of chronic osteomyelitis, patients may be treated
    with parenteral antibiotics for two to six weeks.
    However, without adequate debridement, chronic
    osteomyelitis does not respond to most antibiotic
    regimens, no matter what the duration of therapy
    is. Outpatient intravenous therapy using
    long-term intravenous access catheters (i.e.,
    Hickman catheters) decreases the length of
    hospital stays.28-30 .

42
Treatment
  • Oral therapy
  • using fluoroquinolone antibiotics for
    gram-negative organisms is presently being used
    in adults with osteomyelitis.23 None of the
    currently available fluoroquinolones provides
    optimal antistaphylococcal coverage, an important
    disadvantage in view of the rising incidence of
    nosocomially acquired staphylococcal
    resistance.31 Furthermore, the current quinolones
    provide essentially no coverage of anaerobic
    pathogens

43
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44
  • Debridement Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis is
    best managed with a four- to six-week course of
    appropriate antimicrobial therapy. Chronic
    osteomyelitis is generally treated with
    antibiotics and surgical debridement. Surgical
    debridement in patients with chronic
    osteomyelitis can be technically demanding. The
    quality of the debridement is the most critical
    factor in successful management. After
    debridement with excision of bone, it is
    necessary to obliterate the dead space created by
    the removal of tissue. Dead-space management
    includes local myoplasty, free-tissue transfers
    and the use of antibiotic-impregnated beads. Soft
    tissue procedures have been developed to improve
    local blood flow and antibiotic delivery

45
  • Specific forms of chronic osteomyelitis
  • Other forms of chronic osteomyelitis include
  • A Brodie abscess is a form of chronic
    osteomyelitis without a preceding episode of
    acute osteomyelitis..
  • Tuberculous osteomyelitis of the bone is
    secondary spread from a primary source in the
    lung or GI tract. It most commonly occurs in the
    vertebrae (body) and long bones. Once
    established, the bacilli provoke a chronic
    inflammatory reaction. Small patches of caseous
    necrosis occur, and these coalesce to form larger
    abscesses. The infection spreads across the
    epiphysis into the joints. The infection may
    track along soft tissue to appear as a cold
    abscess

46
congenital syphilis. The transplacental spread of
spirochetes from mother to the fetus results in
Long bones, such as the tibia, are mainly
affected. Congenital syphilis has 2 forms
periosteitis and metaphysitis. In periosteitis,
the periosteum is lifted of the diaphysis of long
bone with subperiosteal new-bone formation. This
process gives the characteristic appearance
called sabre tibia. In metaphysitis, the
juxtaepiphyseal metaphysis is involved with
increased bone resorption. Absent osteoblastic
activity results in separation of the epiphyseal
from the metaphysis. acquired syphilis, bone
lesions are manifestations of tertiary syphilis.
Gummatous lesions appear as discrete punched-out
radiolucent lesions in medulla or destructive
lesions within the cortex. The surrounding bone
is sclerotic, and no discharge is present.
47
  • A Brodie abscess
  • is a subacute osteomyelitis with a predilection
    for the ends of long bones and the carpus and
    tarsus. Plain radiographic findings include the
    following (1) a central area of radiolucency
    with a surrounding thick rim of reactive bone
    sclerosis, which may persist for months (2)
    pathognomonic tortuous parallel lucent channels
    extending toward the growth plate (3) a variable
    degree of periosteal new-bone formation and (4)
    associated soft-tissue swelling.

48
  • A Brodie abscess is characterized by a double
    line at the site of the lesion due to the high
    signal intensity of granulation tissue surrounded
    by low signal intensity of bone sclerosis on
    T2-weighted MRIs. The lesion has
    low-to-intermediate signal intensity that is
    outlined by a hypointense rim on T1-weighted MRIs.

49
Brodies abscess, a localised radiolucency
usually seen in the metaphyses of long bones. It
is sometimes difficult
Treatment of Brodies abscess in the
metaphysis includes surgical
curettage
50
Tuberculosis of Skeletal System
51
T9
T10
52
Abscess
Cold abscess
Prevertebral Muscle sheath
Paravertebral abscess
Lumbar abscess
Gluteal abscess
Retropharyngeal abscess
Retropleural abscess
Retroperitoneal abscess
Iliac abscess
Femoral abscess
53
Cold abscess Destruction of soft
tissues. Destruction of bone. Hyperemia.
Kyphosis
54
Neurological Deficit
55
Pott's Spine
Chemotherapy
Surgery
Surgery
Medical
56
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57
Decompression Stabilization
Medical
Anterior Fixation
Antero posterior Fixation
58
pus
Abscess
Anterior Instrumentation
59
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