Osteomyelitis is a rare bone infection. Once considered incurable, current treatments can be successful with removal of infected and necrotic bone and intravenous (IV) antibiotics. Common infection sites are growth plates of the arms and legs in children and the vertebrae and hips in adults. Osteomyelitis of the hand is rare and usually caused by direct inoculation (eg, penetrating trauma and postsurgical infection). It can also be caused by spread from adjacent tissue, the blood stream, or an infected prosthetic joint. Initially, signs and symptoms of osteomyelitis can be vague or absent. A high degree of suspicion is necessary, because osteomyelitis can spread to adjacent joints and cause septic arthritis, or involve soft tissues and form subcutaneous abscesses progressing to ulcerating lesions. An infectious disease specialist should be part of the medical team. Treatment almost always entails a medical-surgical combination approach.1-4
Pathophysiology1-4
Incidence and Related Conditions
Differential Diagnosis
Reproduced from the International statistical classification of diseases and related health problems, 10th revision, Fifth edition, 2016. Geneva, World Health Organization, 2016 https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/246208
The typical patient, most likely a child or an adult aged >50 years, may present with complaints of recent-onset pain, swelling, or discomfort in the hand or upper extremity. There may be recent fever or chills. The patient is unlikely to be able to pinpoint a specific precipitating event. Because there is a variety of risk factors for infection and possible osteomyelitis, the patient must be thoroughly questioned about (for example) recent travel, camping trips, previous surgery, blood circulation disorders, and implanted hardware. If symptoms are not of recent onset, then the differential diagnosis will narrow, as osteomyelitis is associated with rapid, aggressive progression. If a wound is chronic, patient factors such as smoking, compliance, associated medical comorbidities, and immunosuppression may be affecting wound healing.
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