Treatment Challenges of Prosthetic Hip Infection with Associated Iliacus Muscle Abscess: Report of 5 Cases and Literature Review

<p class="p p-first" id="__p2">Prosthetic joint infection is an unfortunate though well-recognized complication of total joint arthroplasty. An iliacus and/or iliopsoas muscle abscess is a rarely documented presentation of hip prosthetic joint infection. It is thought an un...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J. M. Lawrenz, N. W. Mesko, C. A. Higuera, R. M. Molloy, C. Simpfendorfer, M. Babic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2017-03-01
Series:Journal of Bone and Joint Infection
Online Access:https://jbji.copernicus.org/articles/2/127/2017/jbji-2-127-2017.pdf
id doaj-38a698c759184bba8b691766f1975b78
record_format Article
spelling doaj-38a698c759184bba8b691766f1975b782021-03-03T14:49:11ZengCopernicus PublicationsJournal of Bone and Joint Infection2206-35522017-03-01212713510.7150/jbji.16429Treatment Challenges of Prosthetic Hip Infection with Associated Iliacus Muscle Abscess: Report of 5 Cases and Literature ReviewJ. M. Lawrenz0N. W. Mesko1C. A. Higuera2R. M. Molloy3C. Simpfendorfer4M. Babic5Cleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave.Cleveland, OH 44195, USACleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave.Cleveland, OH 44195, USACleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave.Cleveland, OH 44195, USACleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave.Cleveland, OH 44195, USACleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave.Cleveland, OH 44195, USACleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave.Cleveland, OH 44195, USA<p class="p p-first" id="__p2">Prosthetic joint infection is an unfortunate though well-recognized complication of total joint arthroplasty. An iliacus and/or iliopsoas muscle abscess is a rarely documented presentation of hip prosthetic joint infection. It is thought an unrecognized retroperitoneal nidus of infection can be a source of continual seeding of the prosthetic hip joint, prolonging attempts to eradicate infection despite aggressive debridement and explant attempts. The current study presents five cases demonstrating this clinical scenario, and discusses various treatment challenges.</p><p id="__p3">In each case we report the patient's clinical history, pertinent imaging, management and outcome. Diagnosis of the iliacus muscle abscess was made using computed tomography imaging. In brief, the mean number of total drainage procedures (open and percutaneous) per patient was 4.2, and outcomes consisted of one patient with a hip girdlestone, two patients with delayed revisions, and two patients with retained prosthesis. All patients ended with functional pain and on oral antibiotic suppression with an average follow up of 18 months.</p><p class="p p-last" id="__p4">This article highlights an iliacus muscle abscess as an unrecognized source of infection to a prosthetic hip. It demonstrates resilience to standard treatment protocols for prosthetic hip infection, and is associated with poor patient outcomes. Aggressive surgical debridement appears to remain critical to treatment success, and early retroperitoneal debridement of the abscess should be considered.</p>https://jbji.copernicus.org/articles/2/127/2017/jbji-2-127-2017.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. M. Lawrenz
N. W. Mesko
C. A. Higuera
R. M. Molloy
C. Simpfendorfer
M. Babic
spellingShingle J. M. Lawrenz
N. W. Mesko
C. A. Higuera
R. M. Molloy
C. Simpfendorfer
M. Babic
Treatment Challenges of Prosthetic Hip Infection with Associated Iliacus Muscle Abscess: Report of 5 Cases and Literature Review
Journal of Bone and Joint Infection
author_facet J. M. Lawrenz
N. W. Mesko
C. A. Higuera
R. M. Molloy
C. Simpfendorfer
M. Babic
author_sort J. M. Lawrenz
title Treatment Challenges of Prosthetic Hip Infection with Associated Iliacus Muscle Abscess: Report of 5 Cases and Literature Review
title_short Treatment Challenges of Prosthetic Hip Infection with Associated Iliacus Muscle Abscess: Report of 5 Cases and Literature Review
title_full Treatment Challenges of Prosthetic Hip Infection with Associated Iliacus Muscle Abscess: Report of 5 Cases and Literature Review
title_fullStr Treatment Challenges of Prosthetic Hip Infection with Associated Iliacus Muscle Abscess: Report of 5 Cases and Literature Review
title_full_unstemmed Treatment Challenges of Prosthetic Hip Infection with Associated Iliacus Muscle Abscess: Report of 5 Cases and Literature Review
title_sort treatment challenges of prosthetic hip infection with associated iliacus muscle abscess: report of 5 cases and literature review
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Journal of Bone and Joint Infection
issn 2206-3552
publishDate 2017-03-01
description <p class="p p-first" id="__p2">Prosthetic joint infection is an unfortunate though well-recognized complication of total joint arthroplasty. An iliacus and/or iliopsoas muscle abscess is a rarely documented presentation of hip prosthetic joint infection. It is thought an unrecognized retroperitoneal nidus of infection can be a source of continual seeding of the prosthetic hip joint, prolonging attempts to eradicate infection despite aggressive debridement and explant attempts. The current study presents five cases demonstrating this clinical scenario, and discusses various treatment challenges.</p><p id="__p3">In each case we report the patient's clinical history, pertinent imaging, management and outcome. Diagnosis of the iliacus muscle abscess was made using computed tomography imaging. In brief, the mean number of total drainage procedures (open and percutaneous) per patient was 4.2, and outcomes consisted of one patient with a hip girdlestone, two patients with delayed revisions, and two patients with retained prosthesis. All patients ended with functional pain and on oral antibiotic suppression with an average follow up of 18 months.</p><p class="p p-last" id="__p4">This article highlights an iliacus muscle abscess as an unrecognized source of infection to a prosthetic hip. It demonstrates resilience to standard treatment protocols for prosthetic hip infection, and is associated with poor patient outcomes. Aggressive surgical debridement appears to remain critical to treatment success, and early retroperitoneal debridement of the abscess should be considered.</p>
url https://jbji.copernicus.org/articles/2/127/2017/jbji-2-127-2017.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT jmlawrenz treatmentchallengesofprosthetichipinfectionwithassociatediliacusmuscleabscessreportof5casesandliteraturereview
AT nwmesko treatmentchallengesofprosthetichipinfectionwithassociatediliacusmuscleabscessreportof5casesandliteraturereview
AT cahiguera treatmentchallengesofprosthetichipinfectionwithassociatediliacusmuscleabscessreportof5casesandliteraturereview
AT rmmolloy treatmentchallengesofprosthetichipinfectionwithassociatediliacusmuscleabscessreportof5casesandliteraturereview
AT csimpfendorfer treatmentchallengesofprosthetichipinfectionwithassociatediliacusmuscleabscessreportof5casesandliteraturereview
AT mbabic treatmentchallengesofprosthetichipinfectionwithassociatediliacusmuscleabscessreportof5casesandliteraturereview
_version_ 1724232654648246272