Osteomyelitis in children
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Background
Microbiology
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Streptococci
- Kingella kingae, especially for discitis
Pathophysiology
- Etiology is mostly due to hematogenous spread
- Bones have increased vascular supply until about 7 years of age
Investigations
- X-ray
- For long bones, X-ray can show changes quickly
- 3 days after onset of symptoms: soft tissue swelling at the metaphysis
- 3-7 days: obliteration of the translucent fat planes by edema
- 10-21 days: bone destruction, osteopenia, cortical thickening, periosteal reactions
- For membranous or irregular bones, bony destruction and periosteal elevation are seen 2 to 3 weeks later than long bones
- For pelvic and vertebral bones, x-ray is unlikely to be helpful
- For long bones, X-ray can show changes quickly
- MRI
- Usually reserved for cases where x-ray is unlikely to be helpful, or where x-ray was negative but clinical suspicion remains
Management
- Start with intravenous therapy targetting Staphylococcus aureus, such as cefazolin
- Step down to oral therapy such as cephalexin once:
- Afebrile for 48 hours
- Decreased pain, swelling, and erythema
- WBC normalized
- C-reactive protein consistently decreasing
- Total duration is 4 weeks for typical hematogenous osteomyelitis