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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_23 | Pages 30 - 30
1 Dec 2016
Cornu O Van Cauter M Kaminski L Jean-Cyr Y Rodriguez-Villalobos H
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Aim

Bacterial identification in musculoskeletal infection is sometimes difficult and treatment strategy difficult facing unknown pathogen agent. We wonder if the delay of incubation and the preservation conditions of the samples between surgical procurement and subculture on plates have an influence.

Method

25 cm³ bone fragments were obtained from femoral heads retrieved during hip arthroplasty and excluded for bone transplant donation. Informed consent was obtained from the donor for research purpose. The study was approved by the Ethic Committee (N°B403201317725). Bone fragments were immersed for 30 minutes under gently agitation (140 RPM) at 35°C in a physiologic solution (negative control) or two solutions with two concentrations of staphylococcus epidermidis (0.5 Mc Farland or 1.5× 108 bacteria and 7.5×102 bacteria). Bone samples were separated and preserved at room temperature or at 4°C until seeded on Petri Plates to observe the influence of preservation conditions. Samples were plated after different delays (T0, T30min, T1H, T2H, T4H, T6H, T8H, T12H, T16H, T24H et T48H) to observe the influence of delay of culture. Experiments were repeated 5 times. When culture was positive, results were expressed with the number of colony.