Aims. Infection after surgery increases treatment costs and is associated with increased mortality. Hip fracture patients have historically had high rates of methicillin-resistant
Aims. Preoperative nasal
We investigated the incidence of cephalosporin-resistant bacteria in infected hip arthroplasties. Of 740 patients having hip replacement or related procedures performed over three years, 30 had positive bacteriological cultures from tissue removed at the time of surgery. In 18 of the 30 cultures
This prospective five-year study analyses the impact of methicillin-resistant
We examined the rates of infection and colonisation by methicillin-resistant
We describe a case of septic arthritis of the knee in which the diagnosis of tuberculosis was masked by an initial culture growth of
Methicillin-resistant
We have analysed the management and clinical outcome of a series of consecutive patients who had a total hip replacement and developed post-operative surgical site infection (SSI) with methicillin-resistant
Panton-Valentine leukocidin secreted by
We have compared the rates of infection and resistance in an animal model of an orthopaedic procedure which was contaminated with a low-dose inoculum of
Between October 2001 and February 2002, 324 healthcare workers were screened for methicillin-resistant
We describe the development of methicillin-resistant
The aim of this paper was to present the clinical features of
patients with musculoskeletal sources of methicillin-sensitive A total of 137 patients presented with MSSA septicaemia between
2012 and 2015. The primary source of infection was musculoskeletal
in 48 patients (35%). Musculoskeletal infection was considered the
primary source of septicaemia when endocarditis and other obvious
sources were excluded. All patients with an arthroplasty at the time
were evaluated for any prosthetic involvement. Aims
Patients and Methods
We have conducted a case-control study over a period of ten years comparing both deep infection with methicillin-resistant Risk factors associated with deep infection were vascular diseases, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, admission to a high-dependency or an intensive-care unit and open wounds. Those for colonisation were institutional care, vascular diseases and dementia. Older age was a risk factor for any MRSA infection. The length of hospital stay was dramatically increased by deep infection. These risk factors are useful in identifying higher-risk patients who may be more susceptible to MRSA infection. A strategy of early identification and isolation may help to control its spread in trauma units.