RESUMEN
Purpose This is a retrospective descriptive study of a nosocomial outbreak of septic arthritis in a neonatal intensive care unit with a Pseudomonas species as the predominant organism. There have been no previous reports of the same. The risk factors for this disease were analysed. The different diagnostic modalities that we used are described and the short-term outcomes are reported after antibiotic therapy and surgery. Methods Fourteen patients and 16 joints were included in the study over a three-month period. The risk factors were analysed from the records and included prematurity, birth weight, sex and joint predilection. The causative organisms were also analysed from microbiological profiling. The outcomes after surgery and adjunctive antibiotic therapy were analysed in terms of clinical and laboratory parameters. Results Pseudomonas aeruginosa was found to be the predominant organism in this series. The hip joint was predominantly involved and the majority of the patients were found to be premature. All the neonates affected were found to have low birth weight. Conclusion Prematurity and low birth weight were found to have an association with risk for septic arthritis. In our setting of a nosocomial outbreak, a Pseudomonas species was more common than other organisms. A treatment regimen of arthrotomy surgery and adjunctive antibiotic therapy was found to be effective in all our patients.
RESUMEN
Background: The well-accepted treatment of septic arthritis of the hip joint (SAHJ) is surgical drainage of the joint, but repeated aspirations of the hip joint under sonography, have been used for over twenty years with significant success in some centers, including ours. In recent years, we identified some children who did not respond to aspirations and had to undergo arthrotomies. We were concerned that some children may have reached the operating room after a longer than ideal time. Objective: Identification of the characteristics of patients who did not respond to repeated aspirations and development of a treatment algorithm that expedites decision-making regarding the necessity of surgery. Methods: This is a single-center retrospective cohort analysis. All the patients diagnosed with SAHJ between 2007 and 2019 were identified. Patients who responded to repeated aspirations were compared to those who did not improve and required surgery. Demographic and clinical data and laboratory results were obtained from the patients' electronic medical records. Results: Forty-eight children (88.9%) were treated successfully with repeated aspirations and six children (11.1%) did not improve after aspirations and underwent hip arthrotomies. Five out of 48 children from the aspiration group (10.4%) and 4 out of 6 from the arthrotomy group (66.7%) had chronic comorbidities (p = 0.0051). The mean duration of fever over 38.5 degrees centigrade and the length of stay were higher in the arthrotomy group (p = 0.0040, p = 0.0301, respectively). When we examined the change in C-reactive protein (CRP) levels before and after the first aspiration (Delta CRP), we found a decrease in the aspiration group and an increase in the arthrotomy group (p = 0.0044). Conclusion: The new algorithm which we present allows an expeditious assessment of the patient's response to the repeated aspiration method and thus prevents unnecessary surgeries for the treatment of SAHJ. Patients with chronic comorbidities, prolonged fever, and an increase in CRP level following the first aspiration, are at risk of treatment failure and should be treated with an arthrotomy. Level of evidence for clinical articles: Level 4-cohort study.