Purpose: Early treatment of septic arthritis is essential before irreversible damage to the articular cartilage occurs. Clinicians often start empirical antibiotic therapy for symptomatic relief while awaiting a definitive culture report. In present day parlance with variations in different centres in the private and public sector and rampant antibiotic abuse, a lot of resistance is being seen in the flora and their sensitivity patterns. Hence it is imperative to document and analyze these changing trends.

Methods: The authors conducted a retrospective analysis of prospectively gathered data of 60 patients under 14 years of age. Joint arthrotomy was performed as a standard therapeutic protocol and the drained pus or synovial fluid was sent for gram stain and culture by 2 different methods: conventional agar plate method and BACTEC Peds Plus/F bottle method. Antibiotic susceptibility tests were done by the disc diffusion method of Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI).

Results: The commonest presenting age group was below 1 year (80% patients) including 24 neonates. There were 19 hospital and 41 community acquired cases of septic arthritis. The hip (56%) was the commonest affected joint followed by knee (28%), shoulder joint (11%) and elbow (5%). Microorganism was isolated in 53% isolates of joint fluid only (36 culture positive patients). Conventional agar methods of culture showed positive report in only 42% patients (15/36 patients) while with the BACTEC method the yield was 71%. In the Community acquired septic arthritis, methicillin sensitive was isolated as commonest microbe while resistant variety of gram negative bacilli including and were found as predominant organism causing hospital acquired nosocomial infection of joints. The results strikingly differ in terms of response to treatment as most patients (11/19 patients) showed significant resistance to the most commonly practiced empirical antibiotic regimen of ampicillin-cloxacillin group in routine practice. When cefazolin was used as empirical antibiotic, it has shown good response and better sensitivity in 82% patients (27/33 patients).

Conclusion: is still the most common organism in septic arthritis. The BACTEC system was found to improve the yield of clinically significant isolates. Though a significant resistance to common antibiotic regimen is noticed, the strain is susceptible to cephalosporin group of antibiotics. We recommend the use of cephalosporine antibiotics as an empirical therapy till culture and sensitivity report are available.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5359515PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcot.2016.09.001DOI Listing

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