Septic Arthritis

Clinically

 

Unwell / irritable

Fever

Not feeding

Unable to weight bear / limp

Knee pain

 

Examination

 

Fever

Limited / painful ROM

Hip held flexed and externally rotated

- maximises volume of capsule

 

Lab tests

 

WCC > 12 000

ESR > 40

CRP > 10

Blood cultures

 

Joint Aspiration

- Innoculate directly into culture bottles to increase yield of fastidious organisms eg Kingella

- WCC >50 with >80% PMN suggestive

 

Xray

 

May demonstate hip subluxation

 

Ultrasound

 

Confirms hip effusion

 

MRI

 

Can be useful

- identifies proximal femoral osteomyelitis

 

Issue

- requires GA usually

 

Kocher Criteria

 

Kocher MS et al. Differentiating between septic arthritis and transient synovitis of the hip in children : an evidenced-based clinical prediction algorithim. JBJS (Am). 81 (12): 1662 - 70.

- Criteria :

   ESR > 40

   WCC > 12

   Fever >38.5

   Inability to weight-bear

- Risk of Septic Arthritis - 0/4 - .2% ; 1/4 3%; 2/4 40%; 3/4 93% ; 4/4 99%

 

Pathology

 

Staph aureus most common; MRSA increasingly common

Group B Strep

Kingella Kingae (fastidious organism; increasingly common in < 3 years)  

Gonococcus (Sexually active adolescents)

 

Operative Management

 

Indications

- raised inflammatory markers

- fever

- ultrasound with effusion

 

Technique

 

No antibiotics unless positive blood culture

 

Smith Petersen approach

- remove window of capsule

- washout +++

- don't close capsule

- leave in drain

 

Drill proximal femoral metaphysis / femoral neck

- diagnose / decompress osteomyelitis

 

MUA

- ensure hip is stable

- may require posteroperative spica if unstable

 

Post operative

 

Antibiotics

- broad spectrum initially

- targetted antibiotics with positive culture

- IV until child well and inflammatory markers normalised

- oral until 6 weeks

 

TWB 6/52

 

Xray follow up minimum 2 years

- AVN

- chondrolysis

- physeal arrest

- subluxation / dislocation