Ketonis Constantinos, Hickock Noreen J, Ilyas Asif M
Rothman Institute at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
J Hand Microsurg. 2017 Dec;9(3):131-138. doi: 10.1055/s-0037-1606625. Epub 2017 Nov 27.
Pyogenic flexor tenosynovitis (PFT) of the hand remains a challenging problem that often requires surgical irrigation and parenteral or oral antibiotics. The authors hypothesize that the pathophysiology and microenvironment of PFT can be likened to that of periprosthetic joint infections (PJIs), in which bacteria thrive in a closed synovial space with limited blood supply. As such, they postulate that PFT is also facilitated by bacterial attachment and biofilm formation rendering standard treatments less effective. In this study, they evaluate infected tendons for the presence of biofilm and explore new treatment strategies. Fresh human cadaveric hand tendons were harvested and divided into 0.5-cm segments. Samples were sterilized and inoculated with 1 × 10 CFU/mL green fluorescent (GFP-SA) for 48 hours at 37°C. After saline washing to remove plank tonic bacteria, samples were treated for 24 hours with (1) saline irrigation, (2) antibiotics (vancomycin), (3) corticosteroids, or (4) antibiotics/corticosteroid combined. Samples were visualized using confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Following bacterial challenge, CLSM revealed heterogeneous green fluorescence representing bacterial attachment with dense biofilm formation. SEM at > 3,000X, also demonstrated bacterial colonization in grape-like clusters consisted with a thick matrix characteristic of biofilm. Bacterial load by direct colony counting decreased by 18.5% with saline irrigation alone, 42.6% with steroids, 54.4% with antibiotics, and 77.3% with antibiotics/steroids combined ( < 0.05). readily formed thick biofilm on human cadaveric tendons. The addition of both local antibiotics and corticosteroids resulted in greater decreases in biofilm formation on flexor tendons than the traditional treatment of saline irrigation alone. We suggest rethinking the current treatment of PFT and recommend considering a strategy more analogous to PJI management with the adjunctive use of local antibiotics, corticosteroids, and mechanical agitation.
手部化脓性屈指肌腱腱鞘炎(PFT)仍然是一个具有挑战性的问题,通常需要手术冲洗以及胃肠外或口服抗生素治疗。作者推测,PFT的病理生理学和微环境与假体周围关节感染(PJI)相似,在PJI中细菌在血液供应有限的封闭滑膜腔内大量繁殖。因此,他们假设PFT也因细菌附着和生物膜形成而加重,使得标准治疗效果不佳。在本研究中,他们评估感染肌腱中生物膜的存在情况并探索新的治疗策略。
收集新鲜的人类尸体手部肌腱并切成0.5厘米长的片段。将样本灭菌后接种1×10⁶CFU/mL绿色荧光(GFP-SA),并在37℃下培养48小时。用盐水冲洗以去除浮游细菌后,样本分别接受以下处理24小时:(1)盐水冲洗;(2)抗生素(万古霉素);(3)皮质类固醇;或(4)抗生素/皮质类固醇联合治疗。使用共聚焦激光扫描显微镜(CLSM)和扫描电子显微镜(SEM)对样本进行观察。
细菌攻击后,CLSM显示出异质性绿色荧光,代表细菌附着并形成致密生物膜。放大倍数>3000倍的SEM也显示细菌以葡萄状簇的形式定植,伴有生物膜特有的厚基质。通过直接菌落计数得出的细菌载量,单独盐水冲洗降低了18.5%,使用类固醇降低了42.6%,使用抗生素降低了54.4%,抗生素/类固醇联合使用降低了77.3%(P<0.05)。
[细菌名称]很容易在人类尸体肌腱上形成厚生物膜。与单独使用传统的盐水冲洗治疗相比,局部使用抗生素和皮质类固醇联合治疗能更有效地减少屈指肌腱上生物膜的形成。我们建议重新思考PFT的当前治疗方法,并建议考虑采用一种更类似于PJI管理的策略,辅助使用局部抗生素、皮质类固醇和机械搅拌。