Basics & Bugs - Infection Unmasked
- Periprosthetic Joint Infection (PJI): Infection involving prosthesis & adjacent tissues.
- Classification (Timing & Source):
- Early (<3 months post-op): Exogenous (intraoperative contamination).
- Pathogens: S. aureus (MSSA/MRSA), Gram-negatives.
- Delayed (3-12 months post-op): Exogenous (low-virulence organisms).
- Pathogens: CoNS (S. epidermidis), Cutibacterium acnes.
- Late (>12 months post-op): Hematogenous spread.
- Pathogens: S. aureus, Streptococci, Gram-negatives.
- Early (<3 months post-op): Exogenous (intraoperative contamination).
- Common Culprits:
- Overall: Staphylococcus species (both S. aureus & CoNS).
- Biofilm formation is key to chronicity.

⭐ Staphylococcus aureus is the most common pathogen in acute PJI, while Coagulase-Negative Staphylococci (CoNS) like S. epidermidis are more frequent in chronic PJI.
Spotting Trouble - Diagnosis Decoded
Suspect PJI: Persistent pain (esp. rest), fever, warmth, erythema, wound discharge, or sinus tract.
- Initial Workup:
- Labs: ↑ ESR (>30 mm/hr), ↑ CRP (>10 mg/L). Serial monitoring vital.
- Imaging: X-ray (loosening, osteolysis, periosteal reaction).
- Synovial Fluid Aspiration (CRUCIAL):
- Cell Count: WBC >3000/µL (hip/knee PJI, chronic).
- Differential: PMN% >80%.
- Culture: Aerobic & anaerobic (hold antibiotics).
- Biomarkers: Alpha-defensin, Leukocyte Esterase (++).
- MSIS Criteria (2018) for PJI Diagnosis:
- 1 Major: Sinus tract OR ≥2 positive cultures (identical organism).
- ≥3 Minor (of 6): ↑ESR/CRP, ↑Synovial WBC, ↑Synovial PMN%, +Histology (>5 PMNs/HPF), +Culture (single), +LE strip/Alpha-defensin.
⭐ Synovial fluid WBC count and PMN% are key components of MSIS criteria for PJI diagnosis.
Fixing the Mess - Surgical Fixes
- Goal: Eradicate infection, pain relief, function restoration.
- Factors: Infection timing, organism, implant stability, host, soft tissue.
- 1. DAIR: (Debridement, Antibiotics, Implant Retention)
- Acute PJI (<4wks post-op / <3wks symptoms); stable implant; sensitive organism.
- 2. One-Stage Exchange:
- Healthy host; known sensitive organism; good soft tissue/bone.
- 3. Two-Stage Exchange: (⭐ Gold Standard for Chronic PJI)
- Stage 1: Removal, debridement, antibiotic spacer.
- Interim: Systemic Abx (4-6wks).
- Stage 2: Re-implantation post-clearance.
⭐ Two-stage exchange is preferred for chronic PJI, especially with resistant organisms or compromised hosts.
- 4. Resection Arthroplasty: (e.g., Girdlestone - hip)
- Salvage; low demand; medically unfit; persistent infection.
- 5. Amputation:
- Last resort: uncontrolled infection; severe tissue loss.
Drug Power & Defense - Germ Warfare
- Core Principles: Bactericidal, good penetration. IV then oral switch.
- Antibiotic Choice (Culture-guided):
- MSSA: Nafcillin/Cloxacillin, Cefazolin.
- MRSA/CoNS: Vancomycin, Linezolid, Daptomycin. + Rifampicin (combo).
- Streptococci: Penicillin G, Ceftriaxone.
- Gram-negatives: Piperacillin-tazobactam, Cefepime.
- Duration: 4-6 weeks IV/oral post-surgery. Lifelong suppression if retained.
- Antibiotic-Loaded Cement Spacers (ALCS): High local antibiotic delivery (Vancomycin, Gentamicin).
- PJI Prevention:
- Pre-op: S. aureus decolonization, optimize comorbidities.
- Intra-op: Prophylactic antibiotics (<60 min pre-incision), strict asepsis.
⭐ Rifampicin is key for Staphylococcal PJI (anti-biofilm), always use in combination to prevent resistance.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- MSIS criteria are key for diagnosing Periprosthetic Joint Infection (PJI).
- Two-stage exchange arthroplasty remains the gold standard for managing chronic PJI.
- DAIR (Debridement, Antibiotics, Implant Retention) is suitable for acute early PJI (<4 weeks) with a stable implant.
- Antibiotic-loaded cement spacers (e.g., Vancomycin, Tobramycin) are vital in two-stage procedures.
- Prolonged IV antibiotic therapy (typically 4-6 weeks) is essential after surgical intervention.
- Staphylococcus aureus is the most common causative pathogen in PJI.
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