학술논문

Positive Culture of Atypical Mycobacterium Avium Following Revision Total Knee Arthroplasty.
Document Type
Article
Source
Rhode Island Medical Journal. May2024, Vol. 107 Issue 5, p7-10. 4p.
Subject
*TOTAL knee replacement
*JOINT infections
*MYCOBACTERIUM avium
*PROSTHESIS-related infections
*REOPERATION
*KNEE pain
Language
ISSN
0363-7913
Abstract
CASE: We report a rare case of mycobacterial periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) after primary total knee arthroplasty 14 years earlier. Progressive knee pain over three years with a negative PJI infectious workup led to revision total knee arthroplasty. A surprising result was isolation of Mycobacterium avium from tissue cultures taken at time of revision surgery. After six months of antibiotic treatment, the patient is alive with wellfunctioning pain-free TKA at over one-year follow-up. CONCLUSION: Periprosthetic joint infection can present acutely or chronically years following total knee arthroplasty. Depending on the infecting organism, patients can present with sepsis, or a more indolent slower course that mimics aseptic loosening. In the absence of positive pre-operative labs and cultures, and based on the Musculoskeletal Infection Society (MSIS) criteria, aseptic loosening is a diagnosis of exclusion. An atypical infectious organism should be considered a possible cause and may require specialized cultures of operative specimens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]