We report two cases of discitis due to Propionibacterium acnes and review previously published cases of bone and joint infections in which this organism was recovered as a pure culture. P. acnes is an anaerobic organism usually considered a normal inhabitant of the skin but capable of producing a variety of infections including discitis, osteitis, arthritis, and chest wall osteitis. Most patients were immunocompetent. A few infections occurred spontaneously, whereas others were secondary to a break in the skin or to implantation of foreign material into the body for instance during internal fixation of a fracture or arthroplasty. Cases of P. acnes chest wall infection have been reported in patients with palmoplantar pustulosis or chronic or multifocal osteitis, supporting a role for P. acnes in SAPHO syndrome.

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