Mencia Marlon M, Cawich Shamir O, Sandiford Nemandra
Department of Clinical Surgical Sciences, Port of Spain General Hospital, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago.
Joint Reconstruction Unit, Southland Hospital, Invercargill, New Zealand.
Geriatr Orthop Surg Rehabil. 2021 Mar 11;12:21514593211001844. doi: 10.1177/21514593211001844. eCollection 2021.
Prosthetic joint infection (PJI) is the second most common cause for revision following hip hemiarthroplasty (HHA) resulting in a mortality rate of 5.6%. The treatment of PJI is both challenging and controversial, without general consensus on best practice. In an attempt to avoid surgery, patients are commonly prescribed antibiotics, reducing the chance of detecting a microorganism, and culture negative infections are reported to occur in up to 21% of all PJI. Two stage revision is arguably the gold standard treatment but frequently these patients are too frail to undergo such extensive procedures. Some surgeons have attempted to avoid this by leaving well fixed implants undisturbed, effectively performing a partial single-stage revision.
A previously well 83 -year-old female patient presented with a gradual onset of increasing pain and difficulty walking. Just over 1 year prior to this presentation she fell at home and underwent an uncomplicated bipolar hemiarthroplasty. Clinical examination as well as serological and radiological investigations were suspicious for a periprosthetic infection. Her rapidly deteriorating clinical picture required prompt surgical intervention. In theater the patient underwent a single stage partial exchange arthroplasty leaving the well cemented femoral stem undisturbed. Although multiple samples were taken, no microorganism was identified. The patient has been followed up for 1 year and remains well, with no recurrence of infection. Her inflammatory markers have returned to normal and radiographs demonstrate no evidence of loosening of the total hip replacement.
The burden of infection following hip hemiarthroplasty is likely to parallel the predicted increase in hip fractures. The combination of physiologic frailty, osteoporosis and multiple medical comorbidities are pertinent factors for consideration in the development of a treatment strategy. A partial single stage revision THR performed by an experienced arthroplasty surgeon, along with expertly led antimicrobial therapy may be considered in carefully selected patients.
人工关节感染(PJI)是髋关节半关节置换术(HHA)后翻修的第二大常见原因,死亡率为5.6%。PJI的治疗既具有挑战性又存在争议,对于最佳治疗方案尚无普遍共识。为避免手术,通常会给患者开抗生素,这降低了检测出微生物的几率,据报道,所有PJI中高达21%会出现培养阴性感染。两阶段翻修可以说是金标准治疗方法,但这些患者通常身体过于虚弱,无法接受如此复杂的手术。一些外科医生试图通过不扰动固定良好的植入物来避免这种情况,实际上进行部分单阶段翻修。
一名83岁的老年女性患者,此前身体状况良好,逐渐出现疼痛加剧和行走困难。就在此次就诊前1年多,她在家中摔倒,接受了一次无并发症的双极半关节置换术。临床检查以及血清学和影像学检查怀疑存在假体周围感染。她迅速恶化的临床情况需要及时进行手术干预。在手术室里,患者接受了单阶段部分置换关节成形术,未扰动固定良好的股骨干。尽管采集了多个样本,但未发现微生物。该患者已随访1年,情况良好,无感染复发。她的炎症指标已恢复正常,X线片显示全髋关节置换无松动迹象。
髋关节半关节置换术后的感染负担可能与预测的髋部骨折增加情况相似。生理虚弱、骨质疏松和多种内科合并症是制定治疗策略时需要考虑的相关因素。对于经过精心挑选的患者,可以考虑由经验丰富的关节置换外科医生进行部分单阶段翻修全髋关节置换术,并在专业指导下进行抗菌治疗。