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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixty-nine cases of Osteomyelitis, and 27 of septic arthritis have been presented. 69/96 (71%) were children below 12. The sites frequently involved were tibia, femur and humerus. Septic arthritis commonly involved the knee. The commonest organism was Penicillin - resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Though we sought but failed to establish that overt clinical malnutrition was aetiologically important, since 54% were well-fed children, the virulence of the sepsis in which an entire bone shaft may die is disturbing but unexplained. Whereas arthrotomy plus antibiotics gave uniformly good results for septic arthritis, in osteomyelitis, no single treatment regime was outstanding. We would recommend the tetracyclines, (eg. "Reverin"), in addition to appropriate surgery, as a routine.
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PMID:A clinical study of Osteomyelitis and septic arthritis. 26 74

Ten episodes of musculoskeletal sepsis have been seen in nine patients with HIV infection. Seven patients had AIDS, circulating CD4-positive lymphocyte counts being less than 0.1 x 10(9)/l in six. Septic arthritis recurred in seven patients, osteomyelitis in three and pyomyositis and bursitis each occurred in one patient. Staphylococcus aureus was isolated from four patients, atypical micro-organisms being found in three. Presentation of musculoskeletal infection in this patient group may be atypical but rapid diagnosis is important as early antimicrobial therapy is often successful.
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PMID:Septic bone, joint and muscle lesions associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 159

Septic arthritis can complicate many forms of arthritis. Two cases of apatite associated destructive arthropathy (AADA) complicated by sepsis are described. Diagnosis of this complication in the setting of severe joint damage is difficult as AADA and sepsis share certain characteristics--an initial, rapidly progressive, severely painful course and radiographs which show rapidly destructive changes with marked cartilage loss, bone attrition, and virtual absence of osteophyte or cyst response.
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PMID:Septic arthritis complicating apatite associated destructive arthropathy. 176 75

Twenty-one patients older than 60 years of age with septic arthritis were reviewed over a ten-year period. The knee was the joint most commonly involved. Concurrent medical illnesses were noted in the majority of patients, with diabetes mellitus present in 24%. Seventy-one percent of patients had roentgenographic evidence of preexisting joint disease in the affected joint. Most patients were afebrile and had normal white blood cell counts at the time of admission. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was elevated in all patients tested, with an average value of 79. Despite surgical treatment in the majority of patients, the complication rate was high, with 38% developing osteomyelitis; 14%, secondary osteoarthritis; and 19%, mortality due to sepsis. Septic arthritis in the elderly is difficult to diagnose and carries a poor prognosis despite aggressive management.
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PMID:Septic arthritis in the elderly. 229 80

The technetium phosphate bone scans of 106 children with suspected septic arthritis were reviewed to determine whether the bone scan can accurately differentiate septic from nonseptic arthropathy. Only 13% of children with proved septic arthritis had correct "blind" scan interpretation. The clinically adjusted interpretation did not identify septic arthritis in 30%. Septic arthritis was incorrectly identified in 32% of children with no evidence of septic arthritis. No statistically significant differences were noted between the scan findings in the septic and nonseptic groups and no scan findings correlated specifically with the presence or absence of joint sepsis.
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PMID:Technetium phosphate bone scan in the diagnosis of septic arthritis in childhood. 279 33

Septic arthritis is associated with a definite morbidity which may be related to a delay in diagnosis and hence treatment. The cases of three patients with rheumatoid arthritis and chronic chest disease where the joint sepsis was not the predominant feature are presented. The responsible organism was Streptococcus pneumoniae which had spread after recent chest infections. Minimal joint symptoms or general malaise in association with an unexplained rise in erythrocyte sedimentation rate in these circumstances warrant a search for joint sepsis.
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PMID:Pneumococcal septic arthritis in rheumatoid arthritis. 363 70

Septic arthritis is a serious and sometimes fatal complication of rheumatoid arthritis. We have examined the clinical characteristics of 16 patients with infectious arthritis seen during an eight-year period. This represented 0.5% of all admissions to our hospital for patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Although rheumatoid arthritis is considered a predisposing factor for joint sepsis, 15 of our patients had other conditions that most likely increased their susceptibility to infection. Many patients lacked distinctive features of joint sepsis (fever, chills) and only one half had leukocytosis. Six had polyarticular complaints despite documented monarthric sepsis. Delay in diagnosis of joint infection and persistent effusions of the infected joints portended a poor prognosis.
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PMID:Infection versus disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis: eight years' experience. 376 20

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.
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PMID:Septic arthritis in the elderly. 397 35

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.
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PMID:Joint sepsis as a complication of sero-negative arthritis. 398 1

Twenty-four cases of septic arthritis in rheumatoid arthritis patients were compared with 99 cases of septic arthritis in patients without rheumatoid arthritis. In addition, 238 previously published cases of septic arthritis with rheumatoid arthritis were analyzed. Fifteen percent of our patients with septic arthritis had rheumatoid arthritis, which was typically of long duration (mean 15 years), erosive, and seropositive. Fifty-four per cent (28% in the literature) and 9% of patients with and without rheumatoid arthritis, respectively, had pyarthrosis of multiple joints. The knee represented one-third of infected joints and the elbows and wrists were more often infected in patients with than without rheumatoid arthritis. S. aureus was recovered in 80% versus only 60% of patients with and without rheumatoid arthritis, respectively. The source of sepsis was often a skin lesion, in particular at the foot, emphasizing the need for early orthopedic treatment of deformities responsible for skin lesions. Monoarticular infection was more likely to be due to an intraarticular injection. Mortality rate was 17% in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (23% in the literature) versus 7% in patients without rheumatoid arthritis. Staphylococcal infection and infection of multiple joints were associated with higher mortality rates (35% and 49%, respectively). The mortality rate in polyarticular infections has failed to decline over the last 35 years. Initial failure to distinguish septic arthritis from an exacerbation of rheumatoid arthritis contributes to the high mortality rate. The diagnosis of septic arthritis rests on a high index of suspicion. Septic arthritis cannot be ruled out based on absence of local inflammation, fever, or hyperleukocytosis or on presence of inflammation of multiple joints. Joint fluid specimens should routinely be sent to the microbiological laboratory and should be inoculated in blood culture bottles at the least suspicion.
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PMID:[Septic arthritis in rheumatoid polyarthritis. 24 cases and review of the literature]. 792 May 11


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