Abstract
Radiographic changes in the early stages of osteomyelitis may be subtle and, especially after plate osteosynthesis, frequently missed. A previously described experimental model of local bacterial infection was used in an attempt to determine the reliability of specific changes on conventional radiographs for the diagnosis of osteitis after metal-plate implantation and subsequent inoculation of Staphylococcus aureus in rabbit tibiae. Roentgenograms of the treated limbs were evaluated, and seven radiographic parameters, to which numerical scores were assigned, were determined for each bone. Our results substantiate the conclusion that a radiographically verified periosteal reaction is a constant and early skeletal feature of acute osteomyelitis and has the strongest association to the microbiological results (P < 0.05), emphasising its high predictive value. Plate implantation does not notably impede the diagnosis of osteomyelitis. An association between the amount of inoculated bacteria and the extent of radiographic changes could be found. The results of this present study closely resemble those described in man and suggest that this model may be useful for future experimental investigations in determining a score judging the severity of osseous involvement in local bacterial infection after plate osteosynthesis.
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Received: 25 April 2000
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Kraft, C., Schlegel, U., Pfluger, D. et al. Radiological signs of osteitis around extramedullary metal implants . Arch Orth Traum Surg 121, 338–342 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004020000235
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004020000235