Inflammatory arthritis and Mycobacterium Tuberculosis infection: a diagnostic and management challenge for Knee arthroplasty in endemic areas

Obada Hasan, Shahryar Noordin, Riaz Lakdawala, Vickash Kumar, Faisal Mahmood

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Tuberculosis continues to be one of the most challenging health problems more prevalent in developing countries. Pakistan ranks 5th in tuberculosis prevalence among the high-burden countries. Prosthetic joint infection of the knee by acid fast bacilli is a rare and distressing complication, occurring in nearly 1% of primary joint arthroplasties requiring prolonged medical treatment and multiple surgeries. A recent publication extensively reviewed English literature from 1952 to 2016, and repor ted only 64 prosthetic joint infec tion with tuberculosis, of which 27 cases involved the knee. Tuberculosis is a global health problem adding to the challenges that arthroplasty surgeons face in our resource-constrained setting. Furthermore, it presents as other inflammatory arthritis with almost same laboratory and radiological findings. The current paper was planned to highlight the preoperative and postoperative challenges that the arthroplasty surgeon may have in diagnosis and management of this rare infection. We included studies from 1996 to date which reported knee tuberculosis prosthetic joint infection that were managed by medication alone or with surgical intervention in patients who had undergone arthroplasty.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)S101-S107
JournalJPMA. The Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association
Volume69 1)
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2019

Keywords

  • Knee arthroplasty, TB prosthetic joint infection, Endemic, Inflammatory arthritis.

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