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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 20 - 20
1 Dec 2018
Ojeda-Thies C Li C Renz N Trampuz A
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Aim

Radiologic signs such as radiolucent lines around the implant, hardware fracture or displacement and periosteal reaction have been considered suggestive of implant-associated infection. The goal of this study is to assess the correlation of these signs with confirmed internal fixation-associated infection evaluated in a prospective cohort.

Method

We evaluated the radiologic appearance of preoperative standard x-ray images in 421 surgeries performed in 380 patients with internal fixation device in place (56.8% male, mean age 53 ± 17 years). This prospective study was performed in a large single center for musculoskeletal surgery from 2013–2017. Infection was suspected preoperatively in only 23.8% of the surgeries. The most common indications for surgeries in which infection was not suspected were nonunion (84 cases) and symptomatic hardware (57 cases). All removed implants were sent to sonication for biofilm removal and detection. In addition, several peri-implant tissue samples were collected. Radiographs were analyzed in a blinded fashion for signs of radiolucent lines around the implant before removal, hardware fracture or displacement, and soft periosteal reactions suggestive of infection. Diagnosis was established according to the IDSA criteria for PJI. Contingency tables were constructed to determine sensitivity and specificity, and to perform Chi-square tests to compare the presence of infection with radiological signs of infection.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 60 - 60
1 Dec 2018
Ojeda-Thies C Li C Renz N Trampuz A
Full Access

Aim

Unexpected positive infections are distinct entity in prosthetic revision surgery. The prevalence and characteristics of unexpected positive cultures in internal fixation are however less established. The aim of this study was to describe the prevalence and characteristics of unexpected diagnosis of infection in a prospective cohort of revision surgeries following internal fixation.

Method

We reviewed the microbiological results following 356 surgeries that included partial or complete removal of internal fixation, performed in 328 patients (54% male, mean age 53 ± 17 years), in which infection was not initially suspected. This prospective study was performed in a large single center for musculoskeletal surgery from 2013–2017. The implants most commonly removed were plate and/or screws (281 cases, 78,9%), followed by intramedullary nails (64 cases, 18,0%). The main indications for surgery were nonunion (89 cases, 25%) and symptomatic hardware (70 cases, 19,7%). All removed implants were sonicated, and tissue cultures were obtained depending on the surgeon's criteria. Diagnosis of infection was established by the presence of 2 or more positive tissue cultures (1 with a highly virulent microorganism), or ≥ 50 colony-forming units found in the sonication fluid.