Background Periprosthetic joint infection is a leading cause of failure after two-stage reimplantation. One cause of relapse may be persistent subclinical infection. Difficulty exists in detecting biofilm-forming infections. Sonication disrupts biofilm and has led to higher rates of positive intraoperative cultures. Questions/purposes Our aims in this study were to determine (1) if sonication results were predictive of failure, including reinfection, at 2-year followup; and (2) whether sonication of antibiotic spacers at the time of reimplantation improves sensitivity of intraoperative cultures.Methods We prospectively followed 36 consecutive patients undergoing two-stage reimplantation for periprosthetic hip or knee infection. Minimum followup was 19 months (mean, 29.9 months; range, 19-38 months). Results of intraoperative cultures and sonicated antibiotic spacers were analyzed. Results Positive sonication results were predictive of failure as defined by reinfection at 2-year followup. Among the 18 patients who had positive sonication results, reinfection developed in nine patients (50%) compared with two of 18 patients (11%) with negative sonication results (odds ratio, 8.0; 95% CI, 1.2-69.0). Sonication of antibiotic spacers improved the sensitivity of intraoperative cultures from 36% to 82%.
Whether highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) impacts responses to 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (PV) is not known. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels for 6 capsular polysaccharides in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients who had received > or =6 months of HAART were measured either after their first dose of PV (n=46) or after revaccination (n=41); control subjects had never received HAART and had received the first dose of PV (n=38). There were no significant differences in pre- or postvaccination IgG levels among these groups but for 1 capsular polysaccharide. The 3 groups had significant postvaccination increases in IgG levels to all capsular polysaccharides. The control group had a greater number of 2-fold responses than did the combined HAART groups (P<.05). Patients with a CD4 cell count of > or =200 cells/mm3 had a greater number of 2-fold responses than did those with a CD4 cell count of <200 cells/mm3 (P<.05). For revaccinated patients, postvaccination IgG levels were correlated with the CD4 cell count at the initial vaccination. The immunogenicity of PV among patients receiving long-term HAART is modest. It seems best to immunize HIV-infected patients early in the course of disease.
In 2012, a female wildlife biologist experienced fever, malaise, headache, generalized myalgia and arthralgia, neck stiffness, and a sore throat shortly after returning to the United States from a 6-week field expedition to South Sudan and Uganda. She was hospitalized, after which a maculopapular rash developed and became confluent. When the patient was discharged from the hospital on day 14, arthralgia and myalgia had improved, oropharynx ulcerations had healed, the rash had resolved without desquamation, and blood counts and hepatic enzyme levels were returning to reference levels. After several known suspect pathogens were ruled out as the cause of her illness, deep sequencing and metagenomics analysis revealed a novel paramyxovirus related to rubula-like viruses isolated from fruit bats.
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