AI Article Synopsis

  • * Recently, a patient with staphylococcal synovitis was treated, marking the 24th case documented in medical literature; this patient faced multiple complications but fully recovered.
  • * While staphylococcal infections typically affect just the joint, they can lead to serious complications like sepsis and abscesses, even in patients with normal immune function.

Article Abstract

Bacterial arthritis of the sternoclavicular joint is an uncommon disorder caused by a variety of microorganisms. Both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria have been identified as etiologies of an acute suppurative arthritis, whereas a few other bacteria such as mycobacteria and treponemes have been incriminated in chronic disease of the sternoclavicular joint. We recently treated a patient with staphylococcal synovitis of the sternoclavicular joint, which is the 24th recorded in the literature. His illness was complicated by a retrosternal abscess, soft tissue abscess of the chest, septic bursitis, and lumbosacral discitis. He recovered after 6 weeks of nafcillin therapy without any residual infection. Six previous patients with extension into the substernal space and mediastinum have been described. Staphylococcal infection of the sternoclavicular joint, although usually confined to the joint, can be associated with sepsis and metastatic abscess formation as well as substernal extension even in immunocompetent individuals.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.rhu.0000230477.74693.38DOI Listing

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