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Download Septic (Infectious) Arthritis- Intro
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Septic (Infectious) Arthritis- Intro- synovial inflammatory rxn secondary to direct invasin of joint space by bac, viruses, mycobac, and fungi o Acute- caused by pyogenic bacteria. Termed as septic or suppurative arthritis. Gonococcal vs non-gonococcal Neisseria gonorrhea hemogenous spread. Less morbidity associated with this. o Most common ages 18-35 o 4x more common in women (gonorrhea is more often asymptomatic in womenleft untreated) Non-gonococcal—S. aureus is most common. Rapidly destructive. Significant morbidity and mortality. o Children <5 and adults >64 Adult predisposing factors- prosthetic joint, rheumatoid arthritis, a comorbidity such as malignancy, diabetes mellitus, use of immunosuppressive medications, skin infection. o Chronic- caused by slowly progressive organisms such as mycobacteria and fungi o Usually large, monoarticular joints. Non-Gonococcal Arthritis o Hematogenous seeding is most common—synovial membrane is highly vascular and lacks a basement membrane Sources: Infections or invasive procedures of the skin, respiratory, urinary systems, or oral cavities, IV catheters, Illicit IV drugs o Direct Inoculation—2nd most common. Prosthetic joint infection from operative procedure, or direct inoculation of native joints from surgical procedure, trauma, bite, or FB puncture into joint space. o Contiguous Source—osteomyelitis (most common in children) o Infants less than 1 year—metaphyseal blood vessels that traverse the growth plate can act as a conduit for infection. o Older children—can break the outer cortex secondary septic arthritis o Adults—skin infection and DM foot ulcers are most common o Staphlococcus epidermis—coagulase negative. Major isolate in early-onset prosthetic joint infection. o Streptococcus spp. —2nd most common in adults and children. Group B Strep > Group A step and S. pneumoniae o Gram Neg. Bacilli—Pseudomonas aeruginosa and E. Coli. IV drug users, young children, elderly, immunocompromised, and those with extra-articular infections. Pathenogenesis of Septic Arthritis o Multifactorial o Synovium is highly vascular without basement membrane easy hematogenous spread o Joint space is largely avascular due to hyaline cartilage, and low fluid shear conditions, which are favorable for bacterial growth. o Colonization factors: Tissue tropism of the bacteria Bacterial receptors that mediate adherence (S. aureus): fibrinogen-binding proteins, fibronectin-binding proteins, collagen receptor, elastin-binding protein, bone sialoprotein adhesion, and protein A. o Virulence: Capsular polysaccharides- interfere with opsonization and phagocytosis Microcapsule- important in early colonization of the joint by allowing staphylococcal adhesion factors to bind to host proteins Staphylococcal wall peptidoglycans (N-formyl-methionine proteins and teichoic acids)- potent mediators of joint inflammation through binding of TLRs. o Host Immune Response: Il-1beta and IL-6 contribute to inflammatory response Acute-phase proteins released from liver to activate complement system TNF-alpha neutrophil recruitment, followed by macrophages/monocytes If infection is not rapidly cleared, then immune response elevated inflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6, IL-8, and granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor), and with ROS in joint space rapid joint destruction. Neutrophils release metalloproteinases and lysosomal and proteolytic enzymes degeneration of articular cartilage, then destruction of subchondral bone (can happen in as little as 3 days.) N. gonorrhea elicits a mild influx of neutrophils and therefore results in minimal joint destruction Synovial effusion can develop in bacterial arthritis increased pressure and less ability to get blood and nutrients to the joint further destruction of joint Risk Factors o Non-gonococcal: Age, underlying joint disease, prosthetic joint, DM, skin infections Old age- weaker immune responses, more chronic diseases Joint disease- RA and prosthetic joints ^ likelihood for bacteria to invade DM- reduces body’s ability to defend pathogens Skin infection- increased risk of bacteremia Clinical Manifestations o Fever, malaise, single joint that is hot, red, severely painful, swollen, marked decreased ROM due to obvious synovial effusion. Monoarticular—Knee is most common>hip>shoulder> ankle=wrist Oligoarticular = 10% of non-gonococcal Lab Findings o + blood cultures 50% of the time o Leukocytosis with a left shift o ESR and CRP ^ Synovial fluid findings o Opaque o WBC >50,000 with neutrophil prominence of 75-80% o Glucose concentration is usually at least 50% below blood glucose level Imaging Studies o Plain xray usually normal—soft tissue swelling with widening of joint space Later films—joint space narrowing as cartilage is destroyed. Loss of visualization of the white cortical line over joint surface o Ultrasound—sensitive for detection of joint effusion; not reliable to determine cause o CT and MRI—to distinguish osteomyelitis, peri-articular abscesses, and joint effusions. MRI preferred. Can determine jnt effusion, jnt space narrowing, bone and cartilage erosions, gas within the joint, and soft tissue swelling. Treatment o Antimicrobials, drainage, immobilization for pain control o Antibiotics Based on likelihood of the organism involved, then later modified, if needed, after results of culture and gram staining come in o Drainage Needle aspiration initially up to 2-3x a day if necessary to prevent accumulation Percutaneous drainage Surgical- when percutaneous drainage and antibiotics fair to clear infection in 5-7 days o Joint Mobilization Isotonic exercise—prevents muscle atrophy and facilitates healing Gonococcal Arthritis o Complication of the STD, gonorrhea (gram negative diplococci, Neisseria gonorrhea) Women- endocervix and urethra; Men- epididymis o Dissemination from mucosal primary site—joint is most common site of dissemination, but only 1-2% of gonorrhea disseminates hematogenously Risk Factors o N. Gonorrhoeae virulence, diagnosis delay, complement system deficiency, SLE, female, menstruation, pregnancy, male homosexuality, and low SES and educational status. o Virulence Antigenic variation of gonococcal pili Protein IA and IB—A= disseminated infections; localized infections Protein II—avoids immune clearance Protein III Lipo-oligosaccharide—synovial damage o Complement deficiency—13% of disseminated gonorrheal infections (DGI) o Females—4x as likely to develop DGI as males, and menstruation is a risk factor as well Clinical Manifetsations o Time from initial infections to initial manifestations of arthritis range from 1 day to 2 months (surprise!) o Prodromal signs—Migratory arthralgias which are polyarticular, asymmetric, tend to involve upper extremities, and tend to resolve spontaneously in 30-40% of cases or evolve into septic arthritis o Tenosynovitis—rare in other forms of septic arthritis*, so it is a clue to DGI. Inflammation of synovial sheath Pain, swelling, difficulty moving joint Asymmetric “lover’s heels” when it involves the Achilles tendon… (umm.. ok?) o Dermatitis— Extremities and trunk; not the face Maculopapular, pustular, or vasicular lesions less than 5mm on erythematous base Center may become necrotic or hemorrhagic. Painless and nonpruritic o Purulent Arthritis—within days to weeks of gonoccoccal infection More than one joint—knees, wrist, elbows Inflammatory signs Mean WBC is 50,000 and is lower compared to non-gonococcal arthritides* o Non-specific constitutional symptoms: Fever, myalgias, malaise Lab Studies o Gram stain—gram neg. intracellular diplococci o Culture of N. gonorrhoeae o Synovial fluid gram stain is + in 25% of cases; and their cultures are positive in 50% of cases (picky growth requirements)—chocolate agar and CO2 rich environment. Thayer-Martin Agar- 3 antibiotics to kill off everything but N. gonorrhea. Pathogenesis o Clinical presentation of DGI resembles serum sickness with tenosynovitis and migratory arthralgias—often transient and disappear without treatment o Other differentials: viral hepatitis o Suggested role of immune-mediated hypersensitivity in synovitis and dermatitis associated with DGI—presence of circulating immune complexes o Deposition of circulation gonococcal antigen-antibody complexes due to DGI seeding in the joint and therefore gonococcal arthritis Tuberculous Arthritis ^ HIV and anti-tuberculous drug resistance increased prevalence of this arthritis o 2/3 of HIV pts have TB Anti-TNF drugs for RA have also lead to ^ in TB Pathogenesis o Direct invasion from adjacent TB osteomyelitis o Hematogenous dissemination from primary focus (lungs, lymph, or viscera) Risk Factors o SES—elderly with compromised immune systems. Also living situations/environmental exposures and ethnic minorities and immigrants from countries with high incidence of TB o Immunocompromised—HIV, DM, malnutrition, alcohol, debilitating illness, corticosteroid therapy, immunosuppressive and cytotoxic drugs o Local joint and bone tissue factors—joint/bone trauma can lead to reactivation of the disease. Ex IV drugs, surgery, RA, SLE, Sjogren syndrome, gouty arthritis, prosthetic joint, osteonecrosis Clinical Presentation o Chronic monoarthritis in large and medium weight-bearing joints Hip and knee most common; men 50+ o Chronic progressive low-grade joint pain and swelling without warmth or erythema and stiffness with slowly progressive loss of fn, often with eventual abscess formation. Fever, night sweats, weight loss and anorexia may be present. Imaging o Phemister Triad: periarticular osteoporosis, peripherally located osseous erosion, gradual diminution of joint space In contrast: RA and pyogenic arthritis has joint space narrowing early on Diagnosis o Synovial fluid—variable and do not distinguish TB from other arthridites Cell counts often inflammatory rather than septic in nature—may have predominance of neutrophils Glucose tends to be low and more than 10mg/dL below serum levels o Acid Fast Smear of synovial fluid—only + in 10-20% of cases o Synovial fluid culture- 80% of cases show up + o Open biopsy technique typical caseous granulomas If left untreated complete joint obliteration with fibrous ankylosis of joint Lyme Arthritis Borrelia burgdorferi- spirochete. Transmitted by deer tick (Ixodes). o Early localization of infections—erythema migrans (bulls eye) within 1 month of tick bite (axilla, groin, popliteal areas) Expands at rate of 2-3cm per day; central clearing in larger lesions Lesions greater than 5cm in diameter are sufficient for est. diagnosis of Lyme disease Flu-like symptoms: fever, malaise, neck pain or stiffness, arthralgias, myalgias o Early disseminated infection Within weeks of onset of infection Can disseminate through skin, blood, and lymph to infect multiple tissues Clinically apparent disease seen in skin, heart, and nervous system Debilitating fatigue and appear ill Skin—bull’s eye is a sign of disseminated infection. Secondary lesions are smaller and can occur anywhere, but most noticeable on the trunk (flat macules and can develop partial clearing) Can be accompanied by migratory muscle, joint, and periarticular pain that lasts hours to days Cardiac—varying degrees of atrioventricular block, occasionally accompanied by mild myopericarditis Nervous System—occurs in less than 10%. Meningitis: headache, photophobia, and/or stiff neck o Late disease Months after onset of infection Untreated pt late manifestations such as lyme arthritis and encephalomyelitis Lyme Arthritis Clinical Presentation—months or years after B. burgdorferi infection. o Usually monoarthicular or oligoarticular in one or a few large joints (fewer than 5 total). Knee most common (big surprise). o Joints are warm with large effusions (more than 100mL in the knee), but with little pain. o Recurrent episodes- smaller effusions, pannus, bony erosion, and cartilage destruction Synovial fluid findings— o Inflammatory with WBC about 24,000 with predominance of neutrophils Synovial biopsy findings—depends on chronicity. o May have only mononuclear cell infiltration o More advanced changes—pannus, consistent with rheumatoid synovium o Silver stains may reveal small numbers of organisms in vicinity of blood vessels in approx. 25% of synovial biopsies Antibiotic refractory Lyme Arthritis—10% treated with antibiotics have persistent joint inflammation and proliferative synovitis o May be due to induced autoimmunity. “It is hypothesized that specific HLA-DR molecules bind an epitope of B. burgdorferi outer surface protein A, which initiates a T-cell reaction to this epitope. The T-cells may crossreact with an unknown self-antigen (an example of “molecular mimicry”). The joints in these patients have synovial pannus, which causes articular cartilage destruction and permanent deformities.” Laboratory Findings o Routine labs are non-specific Mild elevated neutrophil, ESR, and liver fn tests Diagnosis o Antibodies to B. burgdorferi—indicates previous exposure, but is not necessarily evidence of active infection About 5% of normal human serum samples yield + results on serologic tests for lyme disease in nonendemic areas o Two-Tiered approach: ELISA or indirect IF to detect IgM and IgG reactivity to the organism (initial screening test), followed by immunoblot (Western) to confirm + or equivocal results from Ab test Imaging o Limited role o Xray shows arthritic joints with changes consistent with inflammatory arthropathy, including joint effusions, synovial hypertrophy, periarticular osteoporosis, cartilage loss, and bony erosions Viral Arthritis Inflammation of joints caused by viral infection Etiology parvovirus B19; hepatitis A; hepatitis B; hepatitis C; rubella virus; alphaviruses (togaviridae family); human immunodeficiency virus; human Tlymphotropic virus 1; Epstein-Barr virus; mumps virus; varicella-zoster virus; adenovirus; coxsackievirus, and herpes simplex virus. Clinical Presentation o Symmetrical small-joint involvement Different viral infections can have variations In most cases, peripheral small joints, hands, wrists, knees, and ankle joints, with prominent morning stiffness and fusiform swelling, but not erythrema o Arthritis lasts from weeks to a few months, can be severe at onset but usually is self-limiting and progressively resolves over time o In all instances, viral arthritis is nondestructive and does not lead to chronic disease Diagnosis o Use symptomology and serology o Take into consideration non-rheumatic symptoms (fever, skin manifestations, etc), medical hx, recent travel and exclusion of other rheumatic or febrile illnesses o PCR of synovial material can be used to ID causative agent—not always conclusive. o Culture is rarely used. o Most do not result in joint changes and only show soft-tissue swelling** Pathogenesis o There has been speculation that autoimmune responses are induced by infection—no convincing human data o Mechanisms are poorly understood—appear to arise from immune responses directed against viral antigens and pathological inflammatory responses generated by viruses and/or their infection products residing within joint tissues Treatment o NSAIDs (for pain relief), with steroids or interferon occasionally used. Antivirals if available. Isn’t it nice to have a random extra blank page so you feel like you’re ending sooner?