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General Orthopaedics

DO WE CHECK ON PROSTHETIC JOINT INFECTION CAUSES CORRECTLY AND FOR LONG ENOUGH RELYING TOO MUCH ON BIOCHEMICAL TESTS?

European Bone And Joint Infection Society (EBJIS) 34th Annual Meeting: PART 1



Abstract

Almost any kind of bacteria can be involved in prosthetic joint infections (PJI).

In 2014 we collected data on 3 patients presenting with hip or knee pain and radiological signs of prosthetic joint mobilization without any other clinical or biochemical suspect of infection.

Interestingly, in all cases we isolated bacteria very rarely involved in human infections: Cupriavidus pauculus, Ralstonia paucula and Neisseria flavescens. Both Cupriavidus pauculus and Ralstonia paucula are Gram negative environmental bacteria which can contaminate water (tap, pool and mineral) and have been isolated from a variety of human clinical sources including blood, wounds, sputum, urine, eye, throat and peritoneal fluid, as non pathogenic flora. In such two patients we were able to cure the infection with quinolones (both strains were sensible). Neisseria species are Gram-negative bacteria included among the proteobacteria. Neisseria flavescens is often found in the upper respiratory tract and oropharynx of humans, rarely associated with infectious process (necrotizing pneumonia and empyema). In this last patient we successfully used piperacillin-tazobactam i.v. during hospitalization and shifted to amoxicillin-clavulanate per os at discharge.

In conclusion, any bacteria can induce PJI: in some cases pre-operative blood tests are normal and therefore useless. We need new tests to overcome this diagnostic problem (such as alpha-defensin) and we must check on rare bacteria prolonging incubation to a more extended period of time (as in Propionebacterium acnes or Mycobacterium spp) and/or sending samples to specialized laboratories.

We thank all the medical and nurse staff of Prosthetic Joint Replacement Unit of Orthopaedic Center, Humanitas Research Hospital


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