Prosthetic joints and other orthopaedic implants have improved quality of life for patients
world-wide and the use of such devices is increasing. However, while infection rates
subsequent to associated surgery are relatively low (<3%), the consequences of incidence
are considerable, encompassing morbidity (including amputation) and mortality in
addition to significant social and economic costs. Emphasis, therefore, has been placed
on mitigating microbial risk, with clinical microbiologists and surgeons utilizing rapidly
evolving molecular laboratory techniques in detection and diagnosis of infection, which
still occurs despite sophisticated patient management. Multidisciplinary approaches are
regularly adopted to achieve this. In this commentary, we describe an unusual case of
Actinomyces infection in total hip arthroplasty and, in that context, describe the
perspectives of the clinical microbiology and surgical teams and how they contrasted.
More specifically, this case demonstrates an ad hoc approach to structured eradication of
biofilms and intracellular bacteria related to biomaterials, as reflected in early usage of
linezolid. This is a complex topic as, and as described in this case, such accelerated
treatment can be effective. This commentary focuses on the merits of such inadvisable
use of potent antimicrobials amid the risk of diminishing valuable antimicrobial efficacy,
albeit resulting in desirable patient outcomes.
History
Publication
Bioengineered;5 (4), pp. 218-221
Publisher
Landes Bioscience
Note
peer-reviewed
Language
English
Also affiliated with
4i - Centre for Interventions in Infection, Inflammation & Immunity