Infectious Arthritis
- Drainage of pus and necrotic debris is needed to cure infection and to prevent destruction of cartilage, postinfectious degenerative arthritis, and joint deformity or instability.
- A third-generation cephalosporin (cefotaxime, 1 g IV q8h; or ceftriaxone, 1-2 g IV q24h) provides adequate empirical coverage for most community-acquired infections in adults when smears demonstrate no organisms. Vancomycin (1 g IV q12h) should be used to cover the possibility of MRSA when there are gram-positive cocci on the smear.
- In IV drug users and other susceptible pts, treatment for gram-negative organisms such as P. aeruginosa should be considered.
- If a pathogen is identified by culture, treatment should be adjusted according to the specific bacterial organism and its antibiotic susceptibility.
- Treatment for S. aureus should be given for 4 weeks, that for enteric gram-negative bacilli for 3-4 weeks, and that for pneumococci or streptococci for 2 weeks.
- Treatment for gonococcal arthritis should commence with ceftriaxone (1 g/d) until improvement; depending on the susceptibilities of the isolate, the 7-day course can be completed with an oral fluoroquinolone (e.g., ciprofloxacin, 500 mg bid) or amoxicillin (500 mg tid). Azithromycin (1 g PO) should be given as a single dose to treat chlamydial co-infection.
- Prosthetic joint infections should be treated with surgery and high-dose IV antibiotics for 4-6 weeks. The prosthesis often has to be removed; to avoid joint removal, antibiotic suppression of infection may be tried. A 3- to 6-month course of ciprofloxacin and rifampin has been successful in S. aureus prosthetic-joint infections of relatively short duration, although prospective trials confirming the efficacy of this regimen are still needed.
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