Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (496 page)

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Specific Orthopedic Injuries

CODES
ICD9

756.51 Osteogenesis imperfecta

ICD10

Q78.0 Osteogenesis imperfecta

OSTEOMYELITIS
Stephen R. Hayden
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Osteomyelitis (OM): Infection of bone with ongoing inflammatory destruction
  • Usually bacterial, but fungal OM does occur
  • Could be acute or chronic
ETIOLOGY
  • Hematogenous OM:
    • Primarily in children, elderly, IV drug abuse (IVDA) patients
    • Seeding of bacteria to bone from remote site of infection via bloodstream
    • Children have acute OM and adults subacute or chronic.
    • Hematogenous OM of long bones rarely occurs in adults.
    • Most children with acute hematogenous OM have no preceding illness.
    • 1/3 have history of trauma to affected area.
    • Staphylococcus aureus
      is the most common cause of OM in all ages.
    • Neonates:
      S. aureus, Enterobacteriaceae
      , group A and B streptococci, and
      Escherichia coli
    • Children:
      S. aureus,
      group A streptococci,
      Haemophilus influenzae, Enterobacteriaceae
    • Salmonella:
      Common in sickle cell disease
    • Adults:
      S. aureus
      ,
      Enterobacteriaceae
      ,
      Pseudomonas
      , gram-negative rods,
      Staphylococcus epidermidis
      , gram-positive anaerobes, especially
      Peptostreptococcus
    • Illicit drug users:
      Candida, Pseudomonas
      ,
      Serratia marcescens
    • Prolonged neutropenia:
      Candida, Aspergillus, Rhizopus, Blastomyces
      , coccidioidomycosis
  • Hematogenous vertebral OM:
    • Uncommon
    • Most prevalent in adults >45 yr
    • Involves the disk and vertebra above and below
    • Often in the setting of long-term urinary catheter placement, IVDA, cancer, hemodialysis, or diabetes
    • IVDA: OM of pubic symphysis, sternoclavicular, and sacroiliac (SI) joints
    • Lumbar vertebrae most common, followed by thoracic, then cervical
    • Posterior extension leads to epidural/subdural abscess or meningitis.
    • Anterior extension may lead to paravertebral, retropharyngeal, mediastinal, subphrenic, retroperitoneal, or psoas abscess.
  • Direct or contiguous OM:
    • Organism(s) directly seeded in bone due to trauma, especially following open fractures:
      • Spread from adjacent site of infection or from surgery
    • More common in adults and adolescents
    • S. aureus, Enterobacteriaceae
      ,
      Pseudomonas
    • Normal vascularity:
      • S. aureus
        and
        S. epidermidis
        , gram-negative bacilli, and anaerobic organisms
    • Vascular insufficiency/diabetes:
      • Small bones of feet are common sites.
      • Infection resulting from minor trauma, infected nail beds, cellulitis, or skin ulceration
      • Polymicrobial, including anaerobes
    • Puncture wound through tennis shoe:
      S. aureus, Pseudomonas
    • Clavicular OM can occur as complication of subclavian vein catheterization.
  • Chronic OM:
    • OM that persists or recurs
    • Distinguishing characteristic is necrotic bone (sequestrum) that must be débrided.
    • S. epidermidis, S. aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, S. marcescens
      , and
      E. coli
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

Vary with duration of disease

History
  • Mainly nonspecific symptoms
  • Pain: Localized, deep, dull, and throbbing; occurs with and without movement
  • Fever and chills; may be absent in chronic OM
  • Malaise, nausea, vomiting
  • Reluctance to use extremity
  • Nonhealing ulcers despite proper therapy
  • Consider OM as a cause of fracture nonunion
  • Predisposing factors: DM, vasculopathy, IVDA, invasive procedures, trauma
Physical-Exam
  • Tenderness to palpation, warmth, erythema, edema, decreased range of motion
  • Drainage of sinus tract
  • Deep ulcers and palpable bone (+ “probe to bone” test has very high positive predictive value)
  • If ulcer size >2 cm
    2
    and >3 mm in depth, bone involvement is likely.
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • CBC
  • ESR and C-reactive protein
  • Radiographs
  • Blood and wound cultures and sensitivities
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • CBC; WBC may be elevated but often normal
  • ESR; elevated in >90% of cases
  • C-reactive protein (usually elevated)
  • Blood cultures (positive in ∼50% of cases)
Imaging
  • Plays a central role in evaluation
  • Start with plain films; other tests often required
  • Radiographs:
    • May be normal for the 1st 2–3 wk of symptoms
    • Earliest finding is periosteal elevation, followed by cortical erosions, then new bone formation.
    • 40–50% of focal bone loss needed to detect lucency on radiograph; fewer than 1/3 of cases have diagnostic findings at 10 days
    • Obtain CXR if TB suspected
  • MRI:
    • Best modality to obtain detailed anatomy and extension of soft tissue and bone marrow involvement
    • Sensitivity and specificity of ∼90%
    • Reveals bone edema, cortical destruction, periosteal reaction, joint surface damage, and soft tissue involvement before x-rays
    • Effective in early detection (3–5 days from onset of infection)
    • Test of choice to identify vertebral OM and OM in diabetic foot ulcers
    • Occasional false-positive results in trauma, previous surgical procedures, or neuropathic joint disease
    • Negative study after 1 wk of symptoms rules out acute OM
  • CT:
    • Modality of choice when MRI cannot be done
    • Reveals bone edema, cortical destruction, periosteal reaction, small foci of gas or foreign bodies, joint surface damage, and soft tissue involvement when plain films not helpful
    • Useful in OM of vertebrae, sternum, calcaneus, pelvic bones
    • Useful to surgeons in guiding débridement and biopsy
  • Bone scan:
    • Technetium 99m methylene diphosphonate (
      99m
      Tc-MDP)
    • Measures increase in bone metabolic activity
    • ∼95% sensitive but less specific than MRI
    • Bone scan abnormal after 2–3 days of symptoms
    • False-positive may occur in trauma, surgery, chronic soft tissue infection, tumor
    • High radiation burden, useful if suspect multifocal disease
  • Leukocyte scintigraphy:
    • Indium
      111
      -labeled WBCs
    • More specific but less sensitive than bone scan
    • Difficult to distinguish bone inflammation from soft tissue inflammation (i.e., cellulitis, tumors, inflammatory arthritis)
  • US:
    • An emerging modality for OM especially in children
    • Periosteal elevation or thickening, fluid collections adjacent to bone often seen
    • May show findings of OM days prior to plain films
    • Useful in guiding biopsy
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
  • Gold standard for diagnosis is bone biopsy with histology and tissue Gram stains, including culture and sensitivities.
  • Needle aspiration has lower sensitivity than open biopsy.
  • Culture of sinus or drainage from wound can be misleading; correlates well with
    S. aureus
    , but not as reliable for other organisms.
Pediatric Considerations
  • 70–85% of children have fever higher than 38.5°C.
  • Neonates are commonly afebrile.
  • Only ∼1 in 3 of children will have leukocytosis.
  • Blood cultures positive in ∼50%
  • US
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Cellulitis
  • Paronychia/felon
  • Bursitis, toxic synovitis, septic arthritis
  • Extremity fracture
  • Bone infarction in sickle cell patients
  • Acute leukemia, malignant bone tumors
  • Mechanical back pain
  • Spinal epidural abscess
  • Brucellosis, especially in SI joint
  • TB, more common in thoracic spine (Pott disease)
TREATMENT
BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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