Septic arthritis of the hip is a rare entity among the adult population, but with a potential severe repercussion. The most accepted treatment is the hip debridement, even though a notorious proportion of the cases need further hip replacement owing to the cartilage destruction. The aim of this study is to analyse all our cases of septic arthritis of the hip treated with a 2-stage strategy using an antibiotic-loaded cement spacer. We present a retrospective review of all our cases of septic arthritis of the hip diagnosed between 2004 and 2016 that were treated with an antibiotic-loaded cement spacer. We analysed age, gender, comorbidities, aetiology, duration of symptoms, C-reactive protein values, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, initial treatment, cultures, definitive treatment and evolution.Aim
Method
patients submitted to hip revision arthroplasty due to an aseptic loosening in whom cultures (at least 5) obtained during surgery were negative and patients submitted to hip revision arthroplasty due to a septic loosening confirmed by the presence of pus or ≥2 positive culture for the same microorganism.
Exchange of infected implant using antibiotic-impregnated cement is the treatment of choice in prosthetic joint infection (PJI). We presented our experience using one or two-stage exchange with uncemented implants. From January 2000 to June 2006 patients with a PJI that were treated with one or two-stage exchange with uncemented implants, were prospectively followed up. The treatment protocol consisted of radical excision of devitalized tissue and of maintaining a high serum antibiotic concentration during surgery followed by systemic antibiotic administration according to the microbiology results. Only patients with ≥6 months of follow-up were included. Good evolution was considered when symptoms and signs of infection disappeared and the C-Reactive Protein was normal. Forty-two patients were included in the study, of whom 25 were male. The mean age was 70 years. The most common symptom was pain (100%) and radiological signs of prosthesis loosening were present in 36 cases (85.7%). Histology was positive in 32 patients (76.2%). Coagulase-negative staphylococci was the most common microorganism (23 cases) followed by S. aureus (5 cases). One-stage exchange was performed in 18 patients, and the long stem component was always uncemented. In one case an acute infection after the arthroplasty obligated to perform an open debridément without implant removal. After a mean follow-up of 31 months (range: 6–84) all patients had a good evolution. In 24 cases a 2-stage exchange with a joint spacer with gentamycin (Spacer-G) was performed. In all cases the definitive arthroplasty was performed using an uncemented long stem. Good evolution was documented in all but one case with persistent infection due to S. aureus after a mean follow-up of 19 months (range: 12–48). Our results suggest that uncemented arthroplasty following a protocol based on radical debridément and systemic antibiotic therapy during and after surgery is a useful approach in PJI.
Intraoperative histology has a high specificity and sensitivity to identify prosthetic joint infection. However, the usefulness of this technique according to the type of microorganism isolated in the periprosthetic tissue has not previously been studied. Frozen sections and cultures from periprosthetic tissue of 38 revision arthroplasties performed due to prosthetic joint infection were retrospectively reviewed. Frozen sections were evaluated according to Mirras’ criteria (adapted by Feldman). Culture was considered positive when the same microorganism was isolated in at least 2 samples or the presence of pus around the prosthesis. Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS) was the aetiology in 13 cases, Gram-negative bacilli in 8, S. aureus in 7, Candida sp and Peptococcus sp in 2 and Enterococcus sp, S.pneumoniae and in 1 case each one. No microorganism was isolated in 4 cases. Frozen sections revealed more than 5 neuthrophils per high power field (forty times) in at least five fields in all cases except in 2 out of 13 caused by CNS (15.3%). A revision of the articles that provided information on the aetiology and the histology supports the findings of our study. In conclusion, frozen section using Feldman’s criteria had a 15.3% of false negative cases when CNS was the aetiology of the prosthetic joint infection.