I studied 1191 patients with known or suspected bone or joint infection. I divided patients with acute onset infection into three groups based on the speed of onset and the intensity of the infection. I divided the patients with known chronic infection into four groups according to the intensity of the infection. I used clinical and radiological parameters to determine the groups. There was a fifth group of patients with suspected infection who turned out to have other related or similar pathology but who were actually free of infection. The laboratory tests studied were all the parameters constituting a full blood count (CBC), tests of inflammatory activity (erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein, plasma viscosity and procalcitonin). I also studied the iron profile (serum iron, iron saturation, transferrin and ferritin). The same tests were used to monitor the patient’s progress as they responded to treatment – or not.
I wish to present my experience with 521 patients with infection around hip arthroplasty and 262 with infected knee arthroplasty. The management in each case depends on circumstances such as the period since surgery, the patient’s symptoms, severity of illness and general health, and the condition of the remaining bone stock. One hundred and thirty hips and 94 knees were managed conservatively i.e. without surgery. Nine knees and 11 hips had debridement and irrigation without removing the arthroplasty. Infection persisted in 2 knees and 3 hips. Nine knees were exchanged in one stage. infection persisted in 5. Forty three hips were exchanged in one stage. Infection persisted in 18. Fifty knees were exchanged in two stages. Infection persisted in 11. One hundred and ninety eight hips were exchanged in two stages. Infection persisted in 28. Arthrodesis was performed in 77 of the more severely infected and destroyed knees. Infection persisted in 32. One hundred and eight of the more severely destroyed hips were left as excision arthroplasties. Ten remained infected but comfortable. Five patients required amputation above the knee and three through the hip. Two patients sustained serious vascular complications during surgery at the hip and one at the knee. Four patients in this series died during treatment