Salmonella Septic Arthritis in A Patient with A Hip Implant: A Case Report

Summary: Joint infections due to non-typhi Salmonella are rare, and usually associated with sickle cell anemia or other immunosuppressive disorders. An 80-year-old female, with a recent history of lung adenocarcinoma and a 20 year history of rheumatoid arthritis with steroid use, presented with hip...

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Main Authors: I-fan Lo, Hao-chiun Chang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taiwan Society of Geriatric Emergency and Critical Medicine (TSGECM) 2018-12-01
Series:International Journal of Gerontology
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1873959818300620
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spelling doaj-efade8ef281e478981b64e041d0055032020-11-24T23:54:40ZengTaiwan Society of Geriatric Emergency and Critical Medicine (TSGECM)International Journal of Gerontology1873-95982018-12-01124344347Salmonella Septic Arthritis in A Patient with A Hip Implant: A Case Report I-fan Lo0 Hao-chiun Chang1Department of orthopedics, MacKay Memorial Hospital, TaiwanCorresponding author. MacKay Memorial Hospital, Department of orthopedics, No.45, Minsheng Rd., Tamsui Dist., New Taipei City, Taiwan.; Department of orthopedics, MacKay Memorial Hospital, TaiwanSummary: Joint infections due to non-typhi Salmonella are rare, and usually associated with sickle cell anemia or other immunosuppressive disorders. An 80-year-old female, with a recent history of lung adenocarcinoma and a 20 year history of rheumatoid arthritis with steroid use, presented with hip pain. Her right hip had 3 screws due to a femoral neck fracture 5 years previously, and she reported suffering from intermittent right hip pain for the previous 3 years. Patrick's test was positive and X-rays showed rapid progression of femoral head collapse and screw penetration within 3 weeks, suggesting hip infection. We removed the implant, performed sequestrectomy of the femoral head, and inserted a cement spacer with debridement. We administered antibiotics after surgery to control hip sepsis, based on Salmonella-positive cultures. The patient ultimately died of sepsis. This case illustrates successful management of hip sepsis requires prompt identification of infection, surgical intervention, and administration of appropriate systemic antibiotics. When a patient presents with musculoskeletal discomfort, the clinician should perform thorough examinations as soon as possible, especially of the patient is immunodeficient. Keywords: Avascular necrosis, Immunosuppression, Non-typhi salmonellahttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1873959818300620
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author I-fan Lo
Hao-chiun Chang
spellingShingle I-fan Lo
Hao-chiun Chang
Salmonella Septic Arthritis in A Patient with A Hip Implant: A Case Report
International Journal of Gerontology
author_facet I-fan Lo
Hao-chiun Chang
author_sort I-fan Lo
title Salmonella Septic Arthritis in A Patient with A Hip Implant: A Case Report
title_short Salmonella Septic Arthritis in A Patient with A Hip Implant: A Case Report
title_full Salmonella Septic Arthritis in A Patient with A Hip Implant: A Case Report
title_fullStr Salmonella Septic Arthritis in A Patient with A Hip Implant: A Case Report
title_full_unstemmed Salmonella Septic Arthritis in A Patient with A Hip Implant: A Case Report
title_sort salmonella septic arthritis in a patient with a hip implant: a case report
publisher Taiwan Society of Geriatric Emergency and Critical Medicine (TSGECM)
series International Journal of Gerontology
issn 1873-9598
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Summary: Joint infections due to non-typhi Salmonella are rare, and usually associated with sickle cell anemia or other immunosuppressive disorders. An 80-year-old female, with a recent history of lung adenocarcinoma and a 20 year history of rheumatoid arthritis with steroid use, presented with hip pain. Her right hip had 3 screws due to a femoral neck fracture 5 years previously, and she reported suffering from intermittent right hip pain for the previous 3 years. Patrick's test was positive and X-rays showed rapid progression of femoral head collapse and screw penetration within 3 weeks, suggesting hip infection. We removed the implant, performed sequestrectomy of the femoral head, and inserted a cement spacer with debridement. We administered antibiotics after surgery to control hip sepsis, based on Salmonella-positive cultures. The patient ultimately died of sepsis. This case illustrates successful management of hip sepsis requires prompt identification of infection, surgical intervention, and administration of appropriate systemic antibiotics. When a patient presents with musculoskeletal discomfort, the clinician should perform thorough examinations as soon as possible, especially of the patient is immunodeficient. Keywords: Avascular necrosis, Immunosuppression, Non-typhi salmonella
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1873959818300620
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