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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The abrupt onset of monoarthritis in an older patient--especially knee, but also wrist, elbow, ankle, or shoulder--should alert the clinician to the possibility of pseudogout. Joint damage or synovitis may predispose aged patients to
sepsis
. Rheumatoid synovium, for example, has altered synovial resistance to bacterial seeding; thus,
septic arthritis
in rheumatoid patients may be polyarticular.
...
PMID:Treating joint inflammation in the elderly: an update. 396 57
Staphylococcus simulans was identified as the etiological agent of osteomyelitis and
septic arthritis
in an adult male who had sustained a fracture of the fibula and syndesmosis separation which required the installation of orthopedic hardware. Identifying characteristics and antibiograms for this organism, recovered from blood, wound exudate, and deep tissue samples, were determined. Recent evidence has linked slime production (adherence to smooth surfaces) by coagulase-negative staphylococci to infections by these organisms at sites where foreign bodies had been inserted. Tests for adherence showed this S. simulans strain to be a strong slime producer. This is the first reported case of osteomyelitis and
septicemia
due to S. simulans.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus simulans septicemia in a patient with chronic osteomyelitis and pyarthrosis. 397 95
The clinical and microbiologic features of
septic arthritis
in 23 elderly patients are reviewed. Fifteen patients had pre-existing joint diseases, predominantly osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis. Eight patients had underlying systemic illnesses, and eight patients were receiving systemic corticosteroid therapy prior to the development of
septic arthritis
. The knee was the joint most commonly infected. Although Staphylococcus aureus was the major pathogen (52.2 per cent of patients), enteric gram-negative bacilli were found in seven of 23 patients (30.4 per cent). Five patients died (21.7 per cent mortality), two as a result of their infection and three of nosocomial Pseudomonas
sepsis
. Eight of the 18 survivors (44.4 per cent) developed osteomyelitis in the contiguous bone. Return of joint function was slow in all patients.
Septic arthritis
in the elderly is difficult to treat and has a poor outcome, possibly because pre-existing joint disease is very common and enteric gram-negative bacilli are often the causative organisms.
...
PMID:Septic arthritis in the elderly. 397 35
Sepsis
due to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis occurred in a neutropenic man during management with a Hickman-Broviac catheter. Despite catheter removal and 10 days of i.v. cefazolin therapy, he developed
septic arthritis
6 weeks later in a nonprosthetic hip joint. S. epidermidis was isolated from the joint and found to have plasmid and phage susceptibility patterns identical to the previous blood isolate. This case is the first to document a metastatic infection from catheter-associated S. epidermidis bacteremia. It suggests that cephalosporins may not be optimal in such infections despite in vitro sensitivity. Vancomycin appears to be the drug of choice for S. epidermidis bacteremia in the neutropenic population.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus epidermidis arthritis following catheter-induced bacteremia in a neutropenic patient. 397 18
A 1-month-old neonate was seen for an acute toxic illness, suggestive of
septicemia
. No obvious focus of infection was present. During attempted femoral venipuncture, purulent material, thought to originate from the right hip joint, was encountered. Because of this aspirate, as well as suggestive local signs,
septic arthritis
of the right hip was diagnosed. Arthrotomy failed to confirm the diagnosis, and on further surgical exploration a purulent psoas abscess was discovered. The patient made an uneventful recovery, and at follow-up 48 months later was asymptomatic with a normal clinical examination. This case illustrates the difficulty of differentiating acute psoas abscess from
septic arthritis
of the hip in the neonate.
...
PMID:Acute psoas abscess in a newborn infant. 398 Jul 15
Septic arthritis
is a recognised complication of rheumatoid arthritis but has not been well described in sero-negative spondarthritis. We report 3 patients with sero-negative inflammatory joint disease who developed joint
sepsis
early in the course of the disease. In none was there a recognisable source of infection. Two cases were complicated by osteomyelitis and in one the
sepsis
has been recurrent over thirty years.
...
PMID:Joint sepsis as a complication of sero-negative arthritis. 398 1
Streptococcus pneumoniae is the leading pathogen in children with sickle cell disease. Forty children younger than 20 years of age who had sickle cell disease and
septicemia
, meningitis, or osteomyelitis/
septic arthritis
were identified. The causes included Streptococcus pneumoniae (20%) and gram-negative organisms (mainly Salmonella) (70%). The gram-negative infections occurred in the first decade of life in 45% of our patients. We believe that this pattern of infection is different and related to the mild nature of sickle cell disease in our patients and to their persistent splenic function. The administration of pneumococcal vaccination may also have played a role. Microinfarcts of the intestinal wall allow the access of gram-negative organisms to the circulation. In places where gastrointestinal tract infections, especially Salmonella, are common, antibiotic therapy effective against these organisms is recommended initially with adjustment after identification and sensitivities are known.
...
PMID:Pattern of bacterial infections in homozygous sickle cell disease. A report from Saudi Arabia. 402 63
Broviac central venous catheters were placed in twenty patients who required long-term intravenous antibiotics for the treatment of osteomyelitis,
septic arthritis
, or an infected total joint arthroplasty. As a group, the twenty patients completed a total of 1,131 days with the catheter in place. There was only one catheter-related complication: extrusion of the Dacron cuff after removal of the catheter. Six antibiotic-related complications occurred, all of which resolved when the antibiotic was changed. No patient had
sepsis
related to use of the catheter, breakage of the catheter, or thrombosis. Twelve patients had part of their antibiotic treatment on an outpatient basis.
...
PMID:Use of the Broviac central venous catheter for intravenous antibiotic therapy in the orthopaedic patient. 403 Aug 30
Timentin, a combination of clavulanic acid (0.1 g) and ticarcillin (3.0 g), has proved effective in vitro against bacterial pathogens that produce beta-lactamases. The usual etiologic bacteria of osteochondritis of the foot (Pseudomonas species) and osteomyelitis/
septic arthritis
(Staphylococcus aureus) are commonly resistant to penicillins. To date, we have used Timentin to treat 30 children with bone, joint, and deep soft tissue infections. Timentin was administered intravenously at an average dosage of 207 mg/kg per day for mild to moderate infection and 310 mg/kg per day for bone and joint infections with systemic signs (
sepsis
). The lower dose was used in 24 patients and the other six patients, who had signs of
sepsis
, received the higher dose. All patients received Timentin intravenously over 30 minutes every four to six hours for a minimum of five days (mean 6.6 +/- 2.6 days, range five to 14 days). The mean time to defervescence and/or reduction in clinical symptoms was 1.6 +/- 1.3 days (range zero to four days). Osteochondritis due to P. aeruginosa was diagnosed in six patients, and septic bursitis, osteomyelitis, or
septic arthritis
due to S. aureus (13 patients) or Staphylococcus species and group A streptococci (four patients) was diagnosed in 17 patients. All isolates were susceptible to Timentin in vitro by disk-diffusion analysis. All patients showed a response to therapy with Timentin, with or without surgical intervention. All patients had clinical and microbiologic cures; no adverse reactions or side effects were observed. There have been no clinical or microbiologic relapses to date. Timentin may prove to be useful in specific bone and joint infections in children.
...
PMID:Timentin therapy for bone, joint, and deep soft tissue infections in children. 407 90
Four patients whose rheumatoid arthritis (RA) was complicated by staphylococcal arthritis were identified. All patients had active, long-standing disease with destructive changes. Affected joints included hip (two patients), knee (one patient), and shoulder (one patient). Pain and loss of motion in the affected joint were prominent, but toxic features of pyogenic infections--hectic fever, chills, sweats, local warmth, or erythema--were conspicuously absent. Two patients had moderate fever and three patients had mild leukocytosis. No patient was leukopenic. When present, fever was attributed to infected decubiti or urinary tract infection and treated with antibiotics. Therapy with corticosteroids and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) probably masked symptoms and delayed the correct diagnosis. Purulent synovial effusions were discovered serendipitously--during arthrography (knee), attempted Girdlestone procedure (hip), and aspiration prior to steroid injection (shoulder).
Sepsis
was included in the preoperative diagnoses only once (hip). Prior instrumentation (aspiration or injection) of the affected joint was not a feature in any patients, although one patient had undergone insertion of a knee prosthesis one year prior to
sepsis
. Infectious organisms were Staphylococcus aureus in three patients and Staphylococcus epidermidis in one. Severe sequelae ensued in three of four patients: death from recurrent
sepsis
(one patient), loss of prosthesis leading to knee arthrodesis (one patient), and protracted
sepsis
with additional pyarthrosis (one patient). The only patient to regain preseptic joint function (shoulder) had not been on long-standing corticosteroids.
Pyarthrosis
must be considered in RA patients with unusually painful or stiff joints even in the absence of toxic symptoms.
...
PMID:Unrecognized staphylococcal pyarthrosis with rheumatoid arthritis. 408 87
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