| Literature DB >> 21837262 |
Carlo Luca Romanò, Delia Romanò, Nicola Logoluso, Lorenzo Drago.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND METHODS: Ten currently available classifications were tested for their ability to describe a continuous cohort of 300 adult patients affected by bone and joint infections. Each classification only focused, on the average, on 1.3 ± 0.4 features of a single clinical condition (osteomyelitis, implant-related infections, or septic arthritis), being able to classify 34.8 ± 24.7% of the patients, while a comprehensive classification system could describe all the patients considered in the study. RESULT ANDEntities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21837262 PMCID: PMC3150792 DOI: 10.1007/s12570-011-0056-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Orthop Traumatol ISSN: 1867-4569
Classifications of bone and joint infections published in the last four decades
| Authors | Year of first publication | Main object of classification | Classified items |
|---|---|---|---|
| Waldvogel et al. | 1970 | Osteomyelitis | Duration |
| Acute | |||
| Chronic | |||
| Etiopathogenesis | |||
| Hematogenous osteomyelitis | |||
| Osteomyelitis secondary to contiguous focus of infection | |||
| No generalized vascular disease | |||
| Generalized vascular disease | |||
| Ger R. | 1977 | Osteomyelitis | Soft tissue |
| Type I, simple sinus | |||
| Type II, chronic superficial ulcer | |||
| Type III, multiple sinuses | |||
| Type IV, multiple skin-lined sinuses | |||
| Cierny and Mader | 1984 | Long bone osteomyelitis | Anatomo-pathological |
| Stage 1, medullary osteomyelitis | |||
| Stage 2, superficial osteomyelitis | |||
| Stage 3, localized osteomyelitis | |||
| Stage 4, diffuse osteomyelitis | |||
| Host | |||
| Type A, normal | |||
| Type B, compromised (local and/or systematic) | |||
| Type C, treatment worse than the disease | |||
| Kelly et al. | 1984 | Osteomyelitis | Etiopathogenesis |
| Hematogenous osteomyelitis | |||
| Posttraumatic (united fracture) | |||
| Posttraumatic (nonunited fracture) | |||
| Post-surgical | |||
| Anatomo-pathological | |||
| Type I, open, without evidence of bone infection | |||
| Type II, circumferential, cortical, and endosteal infection | |||
| Type III, cortical and endosteal infection associated with segmental bone | |||
| Gächter A. | 1985 | Septic arthritis (knee) | Anatomo-pathological |
| Stage I, opacity of fluid, redness of the synovial membrane, no radiographic changes | |||
| Stage II, severe inflammation, fibrinous deposition, pus, no radiological changes | |||
| Stage III, thickening of the synovial membrane, compartment formation, no radiological changes | |||
| Stage IV, aggressive pannus with infiltration of the cartilage, undermining the cartilage, radiological signs of subchondral osteolysis, possible osseous erosions, and cysts | |||
| Gordon et al. | 1988 | Osteomyelitis (tibia) | Bone defect |
| Type A, tibial defects and nonunions without significant segmental loss | |||
| Type B, tibial defects of <3 cm, intact fibula | |||
| Type C, tibial defects of >3 cm, no intact fibula | |||
| McPherson et al. | 2002 | Implant-related infections (hip prosthesis) | Duration |
| I, early postoperative (<4 weeks from surgery) | |||
| II, hematogenous (<4 weeks duration) | |||
| III, late chronic (>4 weeks duration) | |||
| Host | |||
| Type A, uncompromised | |||
| Type B, compromised (one to two compromising factors) Type C, significantly compromised (more than two compromising factors) | |||
| Romanò et al. | 2006 | Osteomyelitis | Bone defect |
| Septic arthritis | Type 1, cavitary defect | ||
| Implant-related infections | Type 2, epiphyseal defect | ||
| Type 3, segmental defect | |||
| Romanò et al. | 2006 | Implant-related infections (osteosynthesis) | Anatomo-pathological |
| Type I, stable osteosynthesis, with callus progression | |||
| Type II, stable osteosynthesis, with scarce or absent callus progression | |||
| Type III, no callus formation and unstable osteosynthesis |
The seven items of the “Seven-Item Comprehensive Classification System” of bone and joint infections
| Clinical presentation | Etiopathogenesis | Anatomo-pathology | Host type/age | Microorganism | Bone defect | Soft tissue defect | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute | Early | Hematogenous | Rachis | Aa,c,i | Gram+ | 1 | 0 |
| Subacute | Delayed | Vasculopathy/neuropathy | Hand | Ba,c,i | Gram− | 2 | cm2 B |
| Chronic | Late | Trauma | Long bones | Ca,c,i | Mixed flora and/or multiresistant | 3A, 3B, 3C | cm2 B |
| Temporary implant | Stage 1 | Mycobacterium | |||||
| ICS classification | Stage 2 | Fungi | |||||
| Type I | Stage 3 | Negative | |||||
| Type II | Stage 4 | ||||||
| Type III | Foot | ||||||
| Permanent implant | Joint | ||||||
Fig. 1Percent of patients (N = 300) classified according to the items of the Seven-Item Comprehensive Classification System, treated consecutively for bone and joint infections in our department during the years 2008–2009
Fig. 2Percent of patients that could be classified according to different available classifications and to the to Seven-Item Comprehensive Classification System