AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of histological analysis of frozen sections in diagnosing infections during hip reimplantation after infection treatment.
  • The research analyzed data from 21 patients and established two criteria (Feldman and Athanasou) for diagnosing infections based on neutrophil counts in tissue samples.
  • Results showed varying degrees of sensitivity and specificity: the Feldman criterion had a low sensitivity but high specificity, while the Athanasou criterion showed improved sensitivity but lower specificity.

Article Abstract

Background: Appropriate interpretation of a frozen section has a relatively high specificity and sensitivity for the diagnosis of infection when septic loosening of a prosthesis is suspected. However, its usefulness for predicting the presence of microorganisms at the time of reimplantation after hip resection arthroplasty for the treatment of infection is not well defined. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the usefulness of histological analysis in this situation.

Methods: From January 2002 to February 2006, a total of twenty-one patients underwent reimplantation after hip resection arthroplasty for the treatment of infection. Histological studies and cultures of specimens of periprosthetic tissue that had been obtained at the time of reimplantation were retrospectively reviewed. The results of culture were considered positive when the same microorganism was isolated in at least two samples. Two histological criteria were used to diagnose infection: (1) Criterion A (the Feldman criterion), defined as the presence of at least five neutrophils per high-power field (x400) in at least five separate microscopic fields and (2) Criterion B (the Athanasou criterion), defined as the presence of at least one neutrophil per high-power field (x400), on average, after examination of ten microscopic fields. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of each of these criteria were calculated with use of microbiological results as the gold standard for defining infection.

Results: Seven of the twenty-one patients had a positive result on culture, and the most common microorganism was coagulase-negative staphylococcus. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of frozen-section analysis were 28.5%, 100%, 100%, and 73.6%, respectively, according to the Feldman criterion and 71.4%, 64.2%, 50%, and 81.8%, respectively, according to the Athanasou criterion. The numbers of lymphocytes and plasma cells did not help in the diagnosis of infection. Fibrosis was more common in patients without an infection.

Conclusions: The probability of infection is high when at least five neutrophils per high-power field are found in the periprosthetic tissue, but it is not possible to rule out infection when the number of neutrophils is less than five.

Level Of Evidence: Diagnostic Level I.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2106/JBJS.F.00741DOI Listing

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