AI Article Synopsis

  • Periprosthetic infection is a serious issue after knee replacement surgery, and this study investigates the necessity of using intramedullary (IM) dowels during a 2-stage treatment protocol.
  • A total of 66 IM cultures were taken from 34 patients with infected knee implants, revealing a 31% positive culture rate, indicating the presence of bacteria in the IM canal.
  • The findings support the use of IM dowels in conjunction with antibiotic spacers, as nearly one-third of patients had positive cultures, suggesting that keeping IM dowels could potentially enhance treatment outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Periprosthetic infection is a devastating complication following total knee arthroplasty. A 2-stage protocol often includes an interim antibiotic spacer with intramedullary (IM) dowels. However, the necessity of IM dowels has recently been challenged. Specifically, the data supporting bacterial colonization of the IM canal are limited and controversial. The purpose of this study was to identify the rate of positive IM cultures during resection arthroplasty in periprosthetic knee infection.

Methods: A total of 66 IM diaphyseal cultures were taken during resection arthroplasty from 34 patients diagnosed with periprosthetic knee infection. These IM cultures were taken from the femoral and tibial canals using separate sterile instruments. All patients had infected primary total knee arthroplasty implants at the time of resection.

Results: Thirty one percent (n = 21) of IM canal cultures in this study were positive from either the tibial or the femoral diaphysis at the time of resection arthroplasty. There were 18 of 21 (86%) of the positive IM canal cultures with concordant intraoperative joint cultures where the IM cultures matched the intraarticular cultures.

Conclusion: With a 31% positive IM canal culture rate, this study confirms the logic of using IM dowels with an antibiotic spacer to treat periprosthetic knee infection. Since the failure of a 2-stage reimplantation is catastrophic, any attempt to provide additional local antibiotic delivery seems warranted. Since nearly one-third of our patients had positive IM cultures, this simple addition to an antibiotic spacer has the potential to improve 2-stage results. Claims supporting the elimination of IM dowels during resection arthroplasty seem ill-advised.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arth.2023.01.017DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

resection arthroplasty
16
total knee
12
knee arthroplasty
12
antibiotic spacer
12
periprosthetic knee
12
canal culture
8
cultures
8
positive cultures
8
cultures resection
8
knee infection
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!