Bishop Gavin B, Born Trevor, Kakar Sanjeev, Jawa Andrew
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, MA; Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
J Hand Surg Am. 2013 Nov;38(11):2208-11. doi: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2013.08.094.
For patients with purulent flexor tenosynovitis, our purpose was to (1) calculate the diagnostic accuracy of white blood count (WBC), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and C-reactive protein (CRP) for those who underwent surgical drainage, (2) to correlate these markers for those treated with antibiotics alone, and (3) to evaluate the accuracy of diagnosis for surgical patients.
A total of 82 consecutive patients (71 surgical and 11 nonsurgical) with flexor tenosynovitis were identified from orthopedic databases at 2 academic centers. We evaluated inflammatory markers (WBC, ESR, and CRP), radiographs, descriptions of surgical findings, and intraoperative cultures for all patients. For nonsurgical patients, we evaluated inflammatory markers for possible correlation with the presumed diagnosis of purulent flexor tenosynovitis. For surgical patients, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were calculated individually for inflammatory markers.
For nonsurgical patients, WBC, ESR, and CRP were elevated in 3 of 11 patients (27%), 6 of 8 patients (75%), and 6 of 7 patients (86%), respectively. For surgical patients, the intraoperative findings or cultures were consistent with infection in 69 of 71 cases (97%), whereas calcific tendinitis was diagnosed in 2 cases. Cultures were positive in 56 patients (79%). All 3 markers had a specificity and positive predictive value of 100%. For WBC, ESR, and CRP, respectively, the sensitivity was 39%, 41%, and 76% and the negative predictive value was 4%, 3%, and 13%.
Commonly used inflammatory blood markers (WBC, ESR, and CRP) may be helpful in diagnosing purulent flexor tenosynovitis. If the levels of any of these markers are elevated in patients suspected of having the diagnosis, the likelihood of infection is extremely high. However, with low negative predictive values, these markers cannot reliably rule out infection.
TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Diagnostic III.
对于脓性屈指肌腱腱鞘炎患者,我们的目的是:(1)计算接受手术引流患者的白细胞计数(WBC)、红细胞沉降率(ESR)和C反应蛋白(CRP)的诊断准确性;(2)将这些指标与仅接受抗生素治疗患者的情况进行关联;(3)评估手术患者的诊断准确性。
从2个学术中心的骨科数据库中识别出82例连续的屈指肌腱腱鞘炎患者(71例接受手术治疗,11例未接受手术治疗)。我们评估了所有患者的炎症指标(WBC、ESR和CRP)、X线片、手术发现描述以及术中培养结果。对于未接受手术治疗的患者,我们评估炎症指标,以确定其与脓性屈指肌腱腱鞘炎推测诊断之间的可能相关性。对于接受手术治疗的患者,分别计算炎症指标的敏感性、特异性、阳性预测值和阴性预测值。
对于未接受手术治疗的患者,11例中有3例(27%)WBC升高,8例中有6例(75%)ESR升高,7例中有6例(86%)CRP升高。对于接受手术治疗的患者,71例中有69例(97%)术中发现或培养结果与感染相符,2例诊断为钙化性肌腱炎。56例患者(79%)培养结果呈阳性。所有3项指标的特异性和阳性预测值均为100%。WBC、ESR和CRP的敏感性分别为39%、41%和76%,阴性预测值分别为4%、3%和13%。
常用的炎症血液指标(WBC、ESR和CRP)可能有助于诊断脓性屈指肌腱腱鞘炎。如果怀疑患有该病的患者中任何一项指标升高,则感染的可能性极高。然而,由于阴性预测值较低,这些指标不能可靠地排除感染。
研究类型/证据水平:诊断性研究III级