Title: JOINTS
1JOINTS
2Rationale
- Primary care providers should master the
technique of joint aspiration and injection for
many reasons - Diagnosing an inflamed joint
- Pain relief of a distended joint
- Injection of steroids for painful joint
3Indications
- Diagnostic
- To evaluate synovial fluid
- Infections
- Rheumatic
- Traumatic
- Crystal-induced etiology
- Therapeutic
- Remove exudate from septic joint
- Relieve pain in grossly swollen joint
- Inject lidocaine, saline, corticosteroids
4Contraindications
- Cellulitis or broken skin over entry site
- Anticoagulant therapy not well tolerated
- Septic effusion of a bursa
- More than 3 previous injections to weight bearing
joint in last 12 months - Suspected bacteremia
- Unstable joint
- Inaccessible joint
5Contraindications
- Absolute
- Local sepsis
- Suspicion of infection
- Sepsis
- Hypersensitivity
- Early trauma
- Hemarthrosis
- Prosthetic joint
- Very unstable joint
- Reluctant patient
- Children
6Contraindications
- Diabetic
- Anticoagulated
- Bleeding disorder
- Immunosuppressed
- Psychogenic pain
- Severe anxiety
- Gut feeling
7Equipment
- Betadine
- Sterile gloves
- 22- to 27-gauge needle for injections
- 18-gauge needle for aspirations
- 10cc syringe
- 30cc syringe is aspirating large amount
- Lidocaine
- Culture tubes
8Pre-procedure Patient Education
- Risks
- Benefits
- Possible complications
- Pain
- Infection
- Bleeding
- Tendon damage
9Technique
- Before injection, consider differential.
- X-rays if tumor or fracture possible
- Identify entry site and mark
- Prep with betadine
- Inject wheel of lidocaine and advance for deeper
anesthesia with 27-gauge needle - Use 18-gauge needle inserted into desired
location and aspirate or 22-gauge and inject
medication
10Lab Analysis of Fluid
- White blood cell count
- lt50,000 inflammatory
- gt50,000 infectious
- Polymorphonucleocyte percentage
- Crystals
- If fluid cloudy, culture
11Septic Arthritis
- Infection occurs by
- Hematogenous spread
- Contiguous source
- Direct implantation
- Postoperative complication
12Septic Arthritis
- Early diagnosis essential
- Growth impairment
- Articular destruction
- Osteomyelitis
- Soft tissue expansion
13Septic Arthritis
- Neisseria gonorrheoae
- Adolescents and young adults
- Staphylococcus
- Patientsgt 40, medical illnesses
- Streptococcus
14N. gonorrhoeae
- Majority in women
- With or without anogenital symptoms
- Occurs during menstruation/pregnancy
- Positive culture 25-60
- Positive Gram stain 65
- WBC and glucose helpful
15Synovial Fluid Analysis
- String sign
- Cell count
- Glucose
- Gram stain
- Crystals
16Synovial Fluid Interpretation
17Joint Injection
18The Drugs
- Corticosteroids
- Rationale for Using Steroid Injection
- Suppressing inflammation
- Short acting Hydrocortisone
- Intermediate acting
- Methylprednisone/Triamcinolone
- Long acting Dexamethasone
19Side Effects
- Systemic
- Facial flushing
- Uterine bleeding
- Deterioration of Diabetic glycemic control
- Significant falls in the ESR and CRP levels
- Other rare side effects
- Anaphylaxis
20Side Effects
- Local
- Post-injection flare of pain
- Subcutaneous atrophy
- Bleeding or bruising
- Soft-tissue calcification
- Steroid arthropathy
- Tendon rupture
- Joint sepsis
- Soft tissue infection
21Local Anesthetics
- Rationale for using
- Diagnostic
- Analgesic
- Dilution
- Distension
- Commonly used
- Lidocaine
- Bupivacaine
22Safety Precautions
- Aseptic Technique
- Adverse Reactions
- Syncope
- Anaphylaxis
23Aspiration
- Frank blood
- Serous fluid
- Serous fluid streaked
- Xanthochromic fluid
- Turbid fluid
- Frank pus
- Other
24Injection Technique
- Equipment
- Syringes
- Needles
- Corticosteroids
- Local anesthetic
- Dosage and volume
25Injection Technique
- Technique
- Tissues
- Bursa and joint
- Tendons and ligaments
- Tendons with sheaths
- Blood vessels
- Aspirations
26Preparation Protocol
- Prepare patient
- Prepare equipment
- Prepare site
- Assemble equipment
- Sterile technique
27Most Common Aspirations and Injections
28The Knee
29The Knee
Landmarks Medial patella middle to superior
portion Insertion 1 cm medial to anteromedial
patella edge. Directed between posterior surface
of patella and intercondylar femoral notch
30Knee Joint
Lateral
Medial
Knee slightly flexed
31The Elbow
32The Elbow
Landmarks Lateral epicondyle and radial head With
elbow extended the depression is
palpated Insertion 22-ga needle from lateral
aspect just distal to lateral epicondyle and
direct medially
33The Elbow
Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow) Symptoms
pain with elevation of third digit against
resistance, with wrist and elbow held in
extension Approach Point of Max Tenderness
34The Elbow
Olecranon Bursitis Diagnosis obvious Approach
20-ga needle into dependent aspect of sac
35The Wrist
De Quervains Synovitis Injection The needle is
placed into the first extensor compartment and
directed proximally toward the radial styloid.
36Questions?