1 / 29

Primary Total Hip Arthroplasty After Infection

Primary Total Hip Arthroplasty After Infection. ICL 2001, Chapter 33 Robbins, MD; Masri, MD; Garbuz, MD; Duncan, MD Presented by Sepein Chiang, D.O. Garden City Hospital. Introduction. More than 200,000 THAs performed annually in the US

brook
Download Presentation

Primary Total Hip Arthroplasty After Infection

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Primary Total Hip Arthroplasty After Infection ICL 2001, Chapter 33 Robbins, MD; Masri, MD; Garbuz, MD; Duncan, MD Presented by Sepein Chiang, D.O. Garden City Hospital

  2. Introduction • More than 200,000 THAs performed annually in the US • Small number performed after proven infection of the hip or proximal femur • Can produce severe early destruction of the hip joint • If treated early, may only need treatment much later in life for secondary degenerative changes

  3. Introduction • Always be aware of the possibility of previous infection • Always treat previously “cured” bone and joint infections with skepticism • First recurrence may be delayed for decades • Gallie reported a case of femoral osteomyelitis in a 10 year old girl that first recurred after 80 years

  4. Introduction • Type of infection: osteomyelitis or septic arthritis • Activity: active or quiescent • Time since infection: recent or historic • Organism: pyogenic, tuberculous or fungal • Treatment options

  5. Osteomyelitis • In the western world, progressive reduction in prevalence • Early childhood: begins in the metaphysis and spreads to the femoral head causing osteonecrosis, septic arthritis and severe hip destruction • S. aureus most common (90%) • S. epidermidis, streptococci

  6. Osteomyelitis • Most recurrences are apparent within the first year • 18% (119 of 655) recurrence • 66% occurred by 6 months • 82% by 1 year • 6% after more than 5 years • 50% had only one episode of recurrence • Proximal femur 12%, pelvis 5% Gillespie and Mayo, JBJS British, 1981

  7. Septic Arthritis • 141 adult hips with septic arthritis • S. aureus in 77% • Gram negative organisms in 16% • Streptococci in 4% • H. influenzae peak incidence at age 2 years • Gram negatives more common in adults Kelly, Orthop Clin North Am, 1975

  8. Septic Arthritis • Diagnosis may be difficult and delayed in infants • By-products of leukocytes and bacteria cause rapid cartilage erosions • Of all joints, infection of the hip is particularly incapacitating

  9. Septic Arthritis • Osteonecrosis of the epiphysis • Trochanteric overgrowth or coxa magna • Bony or fibrous ankylosis • Acetabular dysplasia • Destruction of the proximal femur with dislocation • Adverse effects on future THAs

  10. Tuberculous Infections • Prevalence of pulmonary TB has decreased • Prevalence of extrapulmonary TB has remained steady • 400 cases of skeletal TB per year in the US, of which 13% involved the hip • Mainly affects adults in the 5th and 6th decades • Immunosuppressed, malnourished • Increased reactivation rates in pts w/ HIV

  11. Tuberculous Infections • Radiographically: destructive appearance with adjacent osteopenia and minimal sclerosis • May simulate pyogenic arthritis: periosteal reaction, sclerosis and sequestrum formation

  12. Fungal Infections • Less joint destruction • Not always necessary to irrigate or debride the joint • Spontaneous infection of the natural hip joint is usually caused by noncandidal fungi • Candida is the only fungus reported to have caused infections at a THA • Usually associated with immunosuppression, IV therapy, drug abuse or direct inoculation

  13. Risk Factors • IV drug abuse: 4X increase in infections of the hips, SI and sternocostal joints • Hemoglobinopathies: sickle-cell disease and Salmonella • Ongoing sources of infections • History of previous joint infection • Immunosuppression • Malnourishment

  14. Exclusion of Active Infection: H&P • Fever • Discharging sinus • Rapidly increasing hip pain that has previously been infected

  15. Exclusion of Active Infection: Hematologic Investigations • WBC: can often be normal • ESR: nonspecific • Transient elevation due to minor illness • Permanent elevation in chronic conditions such as connective tissue disorders • Cutoff of 30 mm/h has a sensitivity of 60% to 95% and specificity of 65% to 85%

  16. Exclusion of Active Infection: Hematologic Investigations • CRP: acute phase protein • Sanzen: unless another probable cause was apparent, a CRP >20 mg/L indicated deep sepsis • Improved diagnostic accuracy by considering ESR and CRP together • Spangehl: all 35 of 202 THAs that were infected had an ESR >30 or a CRP >10 • Normal ESR and CRP effectively excluded infection • Elevation of both indicates an 83% probability of infection

  17. Exclusion of Active Infection: Plain Radiographs • Chronic osteomyelitis: sclerosis with adjacent osteopenia, cortical thickening • Osteoarthritis secondary to a healed septic arthritis should evolve slowly with subchondral sclerosis and marginal osteophytes • Reactivation of infection: sudden clinical deterioration with rapid bone destruction

  18. Exclusion of Active Infection: MRI • Active osteomyelitis: dark on T1, bright on T2 • With chronicity, the bright T2 marrow signal becomes more heterogeneous • 95% sensitivity • 88% specificity

  19. Exclusion of Active Infection: Technetium Bone Scan • Very sensitive, nonspecific indicator of osteoblastic activity • Effectively treated chronic osteomyelitis may remain positive for over 1 year

  20. Exclusion of Active Infection: Gallium Citrate Scanning • Taken up by leukocytes • Better indicator of infection than technetium alone • Often used sequentially with technetium • Less sensitive than technetium • Less specific than indium-labeled WBC scan

  21. Exclusion of Active Infection: Indium-labeled WBC Scan • Merkel: More sensitive and specific than sequential technetium-gallium scan for low-grade musculoskeletal sepsis • Criticized in detecting chronic infections when PMNs were labeled • Improved when a third of the labeled leukocytes were lymphocytes • Decreased specificity where remodeling is occurring, such as in a degenerated hip

  22. Exclusion of Active Infection: Aspiration Biopsy • Cherney and Amstutz: no growth on preimplantation aspiration of any of the 23% (7 of 31) of hips that had a recurrence of infection after THA • 86% sensitivity • 94% specificity • May perform multiple core needle biopsies for bacteriologic and histologic analysis

  23. Exclusion of Active Infection: Mantoux Test • Suspected tuberculous infection • Intradermal skin test

  24. Treatment Options • One or two stage reconstruction • Antibiotic cement • Girdlestone • Arthrodesis

  25. Single Stage Reconstruction • Buchholz: 10 yr f/u on 583 pts • Antibiotic cement • 77% eradication • Raut: 7.5 yr f/u on 57 pts w/ actively draining sinuses • Gentamicin cement • 86% eradication

  26. Two Stage Reconstruction • Garvin: reviewed 29 studies • 1 stage, no antibx cement: 58% cure • 2 stage, no antibx cement: 82% cure • 1 stage, antibx cement: 82% cure • 2 stage, antibx cement: 91% cure

  27. Two Stage Reconstruction • Time interval from debridement to implantation: 6 wks to 6 months • McDonald: 5.5 yr f/u on 82 pts w/ cement without antibiotics • Reinfection rate was significantly higher when reimplantation was <1 year, 27% vs 7%

  28. Antibiotic Cement • Addition of antibiotics to cement is unusual in North America • 57% of surgeons in the United Kingdom routinely add antibiotics to cement in primary cases • Masri found therapeutic levels of tobramycin in the periprosthetic fluid up to 4 months after implantation of antibx spacers

  29. Antibiotic Cement • Streptomycin cement for active tuberculous osteomyelitis • Amphoteracin-B cement for fungal

More Related