Incidence of Secondary Osteoarthritis after Primary Shoulder and Knee Empyema and Its Risk Factors

GND
1160305005
ORCID
0000-0002-6976-8953
Affiliation
Orthopaedic Department of the Waldkliniken Eisenberg, Orthopaedic Professorship of the University Hospital Jena, Campus Waldkliniken Eisenberg, 07607 Eisenberg
Böhle, Sabrina;
Affiliation
Clinic for Orthopedics, Trauma Surgery and Hand Surgery Sophien-und Hufeland-Klinikum, 99425 Weimar, Germany
Finsterbusch, Luise;
GND
1248745388
Affiliation
Orthopaedic Department of the Waldkliniken Eisenberg, Orthopaedic Professorship of the University Hospital Jena, Campus Waldkliniken Eisenberg, 07607 Eisenberg
Kirschberg, Julia;
GND
1139869280
Affiliation
Orthopaedic Department of the Waldkliniken Eisenberg, Orthopaedic Professorship of the University Hospital Jena, Campus Waldkliniken Eisenberg, 07607 Eisenberg
Rohe, Sebastian;
GND
142663123
Affiliation
Orthopaedic Department of the Waldkliniken Eisenberg, Orthopaedic Professorship of the University Hospital Jena, Campus Waldkliniken Eisenberg, 07607 Eisenberg, Germany
Heinecke, Markus;
GND
122932978
Affiliation
Orthopaedic Department of the Waldkliniken Eisenberg, Orthopaedic Professorship of the University Hospital Jena, Campus Waldkliniken Eisenberg, 07607 Eisenberg
Matziolis, Georg;
Affiliation
Orthopaedic Department, Heinrich-Braun-Klinikum, 08060 Zwickau, Germany;
Röhner, Eric

Empyema of the joint is an orthopedic emergency that is associated with a prolonged healing process despite adequate surgical and medical therapy. The risk of developing postinfectious osteoarthritis (OA) after successfully treated joint empyema is unknown. Both incidence and risk factors are important for prognostication and would therefore be clinically relevant for the selection of an adequate infectious therapy as well as for the individual follow-up of patients. The aim of this retrospective clinical study was to describe the risk of secondary OA after empyema based on knee and shoulder joint infections after successful primary infection treatment and its risk factors. Thirty-two patients were examined clinically and radiographically after completion of treatment for primary empyema of the knee or shoulder joint. Patients with previous surgery or injections in the affected joint were excluded from the study. The cumulative incidence of new-onset radiographic OA was 28.6%, representing a 5.5-fold increased risk of developing OA compared to the normal population. A figure of 25% of patients underwent total knee arthroplasty after knee empyema. Identified risk factors for primary empyema were obesity, hyperuricemia, and rheumatoid arthritis. Only about 60% of the patients tested positive for bacteria. Staphylococcus aureus, the most common pathogen causing joint empyema, was present in approximately 40% of cases. Secondary osteoarthritis, as a possible secondary disease after joint empyema, could be demonstrated and several risk factors for the primary empyema were identified.

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