| Literature DB >> 34084695 |
Ernesto Muñoz-Mahamud1, Jenaro Ángel Fernández-Valencia1, Andreu Combalia1, Laura Morata2, Álex Soriano2.
Abstract
A plausible cause of persistent infection after septic hip revision may be the presence of nonviable osteomyelitic bone. Since surgical excision of these necrotic fragments is often challenging, the use of fluorescent tetracycline bone labeling (FTBL) as an intraoperative tool may pose an additional assessment aid to provide a visual index of surgical debridement.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34084695 PMCID: PMC8132458 DOI: 10.5194/jbji-6-85-2021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bone Jt Infect ISSN: 2206-3552
Main characteristics regarding the three cases of chronic PJI in which, after multiple surgical interventions, the latter revision was performed using the FTBL technique.
| Case number | Age (years) | Sex | Femoral bone loss | Causative microorganism | Tetracycline dosage and administrationperiod | Surgical intervention | Histological findings | Follow-up (12 months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1 | 67 | Female | IIIA | Meticillin-resistant | Minocycline 100 mg every 12 h orallyfor 4 weeks | Spacer removal andreimplantation | Late fibrosis of marrow with chronic inflammatory infiltrate and plasma cell predominance along with fragments of necrotic bone, consistent with osteomyelitis; | Absence of relapse |
| Case 2 | 40 | Male | II | Meticillin-resistant | Minocycline 100 mg every 12 h orallyfor 10 d | First stage of a two-stage septic revision | Late fibrosis of marrow with chronic inflammatory infiltrate along with fragments of necrotic bone and bone marrow edema, consistent with osteomyelitis; | Absence of relapse,waiting for the secondstage of the revision |
| Case 3 | 68 | Female | I | Minocycline 100 mg every 12 h orally for 7 d | Reimplantation | Bone tissue with reactive vascular proliferation and chronic inflammatory infiltrate along with fragments of necrotic bone and bone marrow edema, consistent with osteomyelitis; | Absence of relapse |
Femoral bone loss according to the Paprosky classification (Weeden and Paprosky, 2002).