Sonication: A Valuable Technique for Diagnosis and Treatment of Periprosthetic Joint Infections

Background. Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is the most severe complication, following joint arthroplasty. Identification of the causal microbial factor is of paramount importance for the successful treatment. Purpose. The aim of this study is to compare the sonication fluid cultures derived fr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: D. S. Evangelopoulos, I. P. Stathopoulos, G. P. Morassi, S. Koufos, A. Albarni, P. K. Karampinas, A. Stylianakis, S. Kohl, S. Pneumaticos, J. Vlamis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2013-01-01
Series:The Scientific World Journal
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/375140
id doaj-9fdbada20c144b9ab7686c613774079d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9fdbada20c144b9ab7686c613774079d2020-11-25T01:04:32ZengHindawi LimitedThe Scientific World Journal1537-744X2013-01-01201310.1155/2013/375140375140Sonication: A Valuable Technique for Diagnosis and Treatment of Periprosthetic Joint InfectionsD. S. Evangelopoulos0I. P. Stathopoulos1G. P. Morassi2S. Koufos3A. Albarni4P. K. Karampinas5A. Stylianakis6S. Kohl7S. Pneumaticos8J. Vlamis93rd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Athens, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, Greece3rd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Athens, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, Greece3rd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Athens, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, Greece3rd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Athens, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, Greece3rd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Athens, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, Greece3rd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Athens, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, GreeceDepartment of Microbiology, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, GreeceDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery, Inselspital, University of Bern, 3010 Bern, Switzerland3rd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Athens, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, Greece3rd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Athens, KAT Hospital, Nikis 2 Street, 14561 Athens, GreeceBackground. Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is the most severe complication, following joint arthroplasty. Identification of the causal microbial factor is of paramount importance for the successful treatment. Purpose. The aim of this study is to compare the sonication fluid cultures derived from joint prosthetic components with the respective periprosthetic tissue cultures. Methods. Explanted prosthesis components for suspected infection were placed into a tank containing sterile Ringer's solution and sonicated for 1 minute at 40 kHz. Sonication fluid cultures were examined for 10 days, and the number and identity of any colony morphology was recorded. In addition, periprosthetic tissue specimens (>5) were collected and cultured according to standard practice. The duration of antimicrobial interruption interval before culture sampling was recorded. Results. Thirty-four patients composed the study group. Sonication fluid cultures were positive in 24 patients (70.5%). Sixteen of thirty four periprosthetic tissue cultures (47.1%) were considered positive, all revealing the same microbial species with the respective sonication fluid cultures: 3 tissue samples showed polymicrobial infection. All tissue cultures were also found positive by the sonication fluid culture. Conclusions. Sonication fluid cultures represent a cheap, easy, accurate, and sensitive diagnostic modality demonstrating increased sensitivity compared to periprosthetic tissue cultures (70.5 versus 47.1%).http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/375140
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D. S. Evangelopoulos
I. P. Stathopoulos
G. P. Morassi
S. Koufos
A. Albarni
P. K. Karampinas
A. Stylianakis
S. Kohl
S. Pneumaticos
J. Vlamis
spellingShingle D. S. Evangelopoulos
I. P. Stathopoulos
G. P. Morassi
S. Koufos
A. Albarni
P. K. Karampinas
A. Stylianakis
S. Kohl
S. Pneumaticos
J. Vlamis
Sonication: A Valuable Technique for Diagnosis and Treatment of Periprosthetic Joint Infections
The Scientific World Journal
author_facet D. S. Evangelopoulos
I. P. Stathopoulos
G. P. Morassi
S. Koufos
A. Albarni
P. K. Karampinas
A. Stylianakis
S. Kohl
S. Pneumaticos
J. Vlamis
author_sort D. S. Evangelopoulos
title Sonication: A Valuable Technique for Diagnosis and Treatment of Periprosthetic Joint Infections
title_short Sonication: A Valuable Technique for Diagnosis and Treatment of Periprosthetic Joint Infections
title_full Sonication: A Valuable Technique for Diagnosis and Treatment of Periprosthetic Joint Infections
title_fullStr Sonication: A Valuable Technique for Diagnosis and Treatment of Periprosthetic Joint Infections
title_full_unstemmed Sonication: A Valuable Technique for Diagnosis and Treatment of Periprosthetic Joint Infections
title_sort sonication: a valuable technique for diagnosis and treatment of periprosthetic joint infections
publisher Hindawi Limited
series The Scientific World Journal
issn 1537-744X
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Background. Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is the most severe complication, following joint arthroplasty. Identification of the causal microbial factor is of paramount importance for the successful treatment. Purpose. The aim of this study is to compare the sonication fluid cultures derived from joint prosthetic components with the respective periprosthetic tissue cultures. Methods. Explanted prosthesis components for suspected infection were placed into a tank containing sterile Ringer's solution and sonicated for 1 minute at 40 kHz. Sonication fluid cultures were examined for 10 days, and the number and identity of any colony morphology was recorded. In addition, periprosthetic tissue specimens (>5) were collected and cultured according to standard practice. The duration of antimicrobial interruption interval before culture sampling was recorded. Results. Thirty-four patients composed the study group. Sonication fluid cultures were positive in 24 patients (70.5%). Sixteen of thirty four periprosthetic tissue cultures (47.1%) were considered positive, all revealing the same microbial species with the respective sonication fluid cultures: 3 tissue samples showed polymicrobial infection. All tissue cultures were also found positive by the sonication fluid culture. Conclusions. Sonication fluid cultures represent a cheap, easy, accurate, and sensitive diagnostic modality demonstrating increased sensitivity compared to periprosthetic tissue cultures (70.5 versus 47.1%).
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/375140
work_keys_str_mv AT dsevangelopoulos sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT ipstathopoulos sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT gpmorassi sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT skoufos sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT aalbarni sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT pkkarampinas sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT astylianakis sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT skohl sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT spneumaticos sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
AT jvlamis sonicationavaluabletechniquefordiagnosisandtreatmentofperiprostheticjointinfections
_version_ 1725197398778576896