Title: Osteomyelitis David Thom, MD, PhD Associate Professor Family
1 Osteomyelitis David Thom, MD, PhDAssociate
ProfessorFamily Community Medicine
2Definition
-
- An infective inflammatory process with bone
destruction - Open biopsy with histology and culture is a
gold standard
3Classification of Osteomyelitis
-
- Age (adult v. child)
- Site (foot, vertebra, long bone)
- Source (trauma/surgery, hematogenous,
or contiguous spread/cellulitis,) - Presence or absence of foreign body (hardware)
- Acute vs. chronic
- Severity
- Comorbidity (e.g., diabetic, sickle cell)
- Organism
-
4Focus of Current Talk
-
- Acute osteomyelitis in the diabetic foot
- Acute vertebral osteomyelitis
- Chronic osteomyelitis
5Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Risk Factors
-
- Virtually always associated with ulcer
- In about 2/3 of infected ulcers
- Less than one-third being clinically diagnosed 1
1. Newman LG et al. JAMA 19912661246
6Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Risk Factors
-
- More common with1
- ulcer for gt 2 weeks
- ulcer gt 2 cm by 2 cm
- ulcer depth gt 3 mm
- ulcer over bone
1. Newman LG et al. JAMA 19912661246
7Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Risk Factors
-
- Predisposing factors
- Poor vascularity
- Neuropathy
- Poor glycemic control
8Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Signs and
Symptoms
-
- No sign or symptom is sensitive
- Pain, inflammation, fever may all be absent
(and often are) - Visualizaton has a specificity of 100
- Probing to bone specificity of 851
- ESR gt 70 has a specificity of 100
1. Grayson ML et al. JAMA 1995273721
9Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Testing
-
- Blood cultures even if not febrile
- Wound cultures not useful
- Open bone biopsy recommended, but not done at
SFGH - Plain films useful if positive (may not show
changes for 2 to 3 weeks however) - MRI is best imaging modality (sensitivity88,
specificity100)1
1. Williamson MR et al J Vasc Surg 199624266
10Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Testing
-
- Radionucleide scanning if MRI not possible
- Tc-99 is most sensitive
- Indium or gallium-labeled leukocyte test is
most specific - Both are pretty poor compared to MRI
11Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Testing
-
- In practice, diagnosis often made without
advanced imaging
12Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Organisms
-
- Staph aureus most common
- Other players are
- Streptococcus sp.
- Enterococcus sp.
- Coag negative Staph
- Gram negative aerobes
- Anaerobes
13Acute Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis Empiric
treatment
-
- Outpatient treatment with ciprofloxin is an
option if you have a sensitive organism and a
compliant patient - Dream on
- In setting where MRSA is possible and no
organism isolated, use vancomycin - That would be us
14Acute Diabetic Foot OsteomyelitisDuration of
Treatment and Follow-up
-
- 4 to 6 weeks IV antibiotics if medical
treatment alone - 2 to 3 weeks if combined with surgical
treatment - Can follow CRP (more responsive then ESR) for
reoccurrence or failure of treatment response - Medical therapy alone has higher failure rate
then with sugery1
1. Tan JS, et al. Clin Infect Dis 199623266.
15Vertebral Osteomyelitis Risk Factors and
Etiology
-
- Risk factors
- Male
- Age gt 50
- IVDU
- Etiology
- Virtually always hematogenous
- Lumbar more common then cervical
16Vertebral Osteomyelitis Signs and Symptoms
-
- Localized pain and tenderness
- Diagnosis often missed or delayed
17Vertebral Osteomyelitis Testing
-
- Plain films
- MRI best
- CT-guided needle biopsy
18Vertebral Osteomyelitis Organisms
-
- Staph Aureus in about 50
- Other organisms
- Gram negative aerobes
- Streptococcus sp.
- Tuberculosis
- Pseudomonas and candida in IVDU
19Vertebral Osteomyelitis Empiric Treatment
-
- Nafcillin plus cefotxime, ceftazidim or cipro
- If possible MRSA, then vancomycin
20Vertebral OsteomyelitisDuration of Treatment
and Follow-up
-
- 6 to 12 weeks IV antibiotics if medical
treatment alone - Surgical treatment indicated if
- abscess
- cord compression
- failure of medical treatment
- Can follow CRP for reoccurrence or failure of
treatment response
21Chronic Osteomyelitis
-
- No established definition
- Generally weeks to years
- Includes bone necrosis with sequestion
- MRI useful in diagnosis
- Avascular sequestra make treatment with abx
alone problematic - No agreed upon treatment regimen