Differentiating Kingella kingae Septic Arthritis of the Hip from Transient Synovitis in Young Children - 22/10/14
on behalf of the
Israeli-Spanish Kingella kingae Research Group∗
Abstract |
Objective |
To conduct a retrospective multicenter study to assess the ability of a predictive algorithm to differentiate between children with Kingella kingae infection of the hip and those with transient synovitis.
Study design |
Medical charts of 25 Israeli and 9 Spanish children aged 6-27 months with culture-proven K kingae arthritis of the hip were reviewed, and information on the 4 variables included in the commonly used Kocher prediction algorithm (body temperature, refusal to bear weight, leukocytosis, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate) was gathered.
Results |
Patients with K kingae arthritis usually presented with mildly abnormal clinical picture and normal serum levels of or near-normal acute-phase reactants. Data on all 4 variables were available for 28 (82%) children, of whom 1 child had none, 6 children had 1, 13 children had 2, 5 had 3, and only 3 children had 4 predictors, implying ≤40% probability of infectious arthritis in 20 (71%) children.
Conclusions |
Because of the overlapping features of K kingae arthritis of the hip and transient synovitis in children younger than 3 years of age, Kocher predictive algorithm is not sensitive enough for differentiating between these 2 conditions. To exclude K kingae arthritis, blood cultures and nucleic acid amplification assay should be performed in young children presenting with irritation of the hip, even in the absence of fever, leukocytosis, or a high Kocher score.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keyword : CRP, ESR, NAA, WBC
Plan
The authors declare no conflicts of interest. |
Vol 165 - N° 5
P. 985 - novembre 2014 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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