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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1289 - 1293
1 Sep 2010
Sultan J Hughes PJ

The crucial differentiation between septic arthritis and transient synovitis of the hip in children can be difficult. In 1999, Kocher et al introduced four clinical predictors which were highly predictive (99.6%) of septic arthritis. These included fever (temperature ≥ 38.5°C), inability to bear weight, white blood-cell count > 12.0 × 10. 9. cells/L and ESR ≥ 40 mm/hr; CRP ≥ 20 mg/L was later added as a fifth predictor. We retrospectively evaluated these predictors to differentiate septic arthritis from transient synovitis of the hip in children over a four-year period in a primary referral general hospital. When all five were positive, the predicted probability of septic arthritis in this study was only 59.9%, with fever being the best predictor. When applied to low-prevalence diseases, even highly specific tests yield a high number of false positives and the predictive value is thereby diminished. Clinical predictors should be applied with caution when assessing a child with an irritable hip, and a high index of suspicion, and close observation of patients at risk should be maintained


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 4 | Pages 635 - 639
1 Jul 1991
Futami T Kasahara Y Suzuki S Ushikubo S Tsuchiya T

We used ultrasonography to examine 36 children suffering from transient synovitis and 12 children with early Perthes' disease. Widening of the joint space was revealed by ultrasonography in all affected hips with either disease. In the patients with transient synovitis, capsular distension was attributed to synovial effusion, while in the patients with Perthes' disease it was produced by thickening of the synovial membrane. Neither capsular distension nor thickening of the joint cartilage was seen in the contralateral normal hip in the patients with transient synovitis, but they were common in early Perthes' disease. Ultrasonography may provide significant diagnostic clues to differentiate early Perthes' from transient synovitis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 5 | Pages 808 - 811
1 Nov 1986
Kallio P Ryoppy S Kunnamo I

A prospective study was made of 119 children with transient synovitis or any other cause for synovial effusion and elevated intra-articular pressure. During a follow-up of one year not one case of Perthes' disease was diagnosed and the late clinical and radiographic changes were minimal with moderate overgrowth of the femoral head in 33% and widening of the joint space in 14.2%. Our results do not support the widely accepted concept that Perthes' disease develops as a result of the period of elevated intra-articular pressure found in transient synovitis. Further research into this and Perthes' disease should follow the premise that they are two different diseases without any aetiological connection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 5 | Pages 852 - 853
1 Sep 1990
Hill S MacLarnon J Nag D

We reviewed 15 children with transient synovitis of the hip who had aspiration of an effusion under local anaesthesia with ultrasound guidance. There were no significant complications; aspiration was useful for diagnosis and gave considerable symptomatic relief. We discuss the role of ultrasound in diagnosis and treatment


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 2 | Pages 238 - 242
1 Mar 1987
Landin L Danielsson L Wattsgard C

In a prospective five-year study, 294 episodes of acute transient synovitis of the hip were diagnosed in 275 children. The average annual incidence was 0.2% and the accumulated risk of suffering at least one episode was 3%. The risk of recurrence was 20 times greater than the risk of having a single episode. Perthes' disease was diagnosed from one to five months after the acute attack of synovitis in 10 cases (3.4%). Review of the initial radiographs revealed signs of avascular necrosis in three of the 10 cases, and an increased joint space in five. Only two cases had had completely normal radiographs. The value of routine radiographs taken after three months was minimal. Factors associated with the incidence of Perthes' disease included prolonged time in traction before the range of hip movement became normal, increase in joint space on the initial radiographs and the recurrence of hip symptoms after initial relief


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 1 | Pages 71 - 74
1 Jan 1987
Vegter J

The pathogenesis of Perthes' disease has been related to increased intra-articular pressure secondary to a joint effusion. The pressure within the hip in different positions was measured in eight children with transient synovitis and four with the synovial stage of Perthes' disease. In the position of comfort for the hip this pressure was always less than the arteriolar blood pressure and in a supine position it did not exceed the systolic blood pressure. However, in extension with medial rotation the intra-articular pressure always became several times the systolic blood pressure. This high pressure was also recorded in the stable lateral position which occurs normally during sleep. It is concluded that in the presence of a synovial effusion in the hip, a position of extension and medial rotation causes an increase in intra-articular pressure which may compromise the blood supply to the capital epiphysis of the femur


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 973 - 974
1 Nov 1993
Tolat V Carty H Klenerman L Hart C


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 3 | Pages 227 - 229
1 Mar 2023
Theologis T Brady MA Hartshorn S Faust SN Offiah AC

Acute bone and joint infections in children are serious, and misdiagnosis can threaten limb and life. Most young children who present acutely with pain, limping, and/or loss of function have transient synovitis, which will resolve spontaneously within a few days. A minority will have a bone or joint infection. Clinicians are faced with a diagnostic challenge: children with transient synovitis can safely be sent home, but children with bone and joint infection require urgent treatment to avoid complications. Clinicians often respond to this challenge by using a series of rudimentary decision support tools, based on clinical, haematological, and biochemical parameters, to differentiate childhood osteoarticular infection from other diagnoses. However, these tools were developed without methodological expertise in diagnostic accuracy and do not consider the importance of imaging (ultrasound scan and MRI). There is wide variation in clinical practice with regard to the indications, choice, sequence, and timing of imaging. This variation is most likely due to the lack of evidence concerning the role of imaging in acute bone and joint infection in children. We describe the first steps of a large UK multicentre study, funded by the National Institute for Health Research, which seeks to integrate definitively the role of imaging into a decision support tool, developed with the assistance of individuals with expertise in the development of clinical prediction tools. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2023;105-B(3):227–229


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 93-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1556 - 1561
1 Nov 2011
Singhal R Perry DC Khan FN Cohen D Stevenson HL James LA Sampath JS Bruce CE

Clinical prediction algorithms are used to differentiate transient synovitis from septic arthritis. These algorithms typically include the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), although in clinical practice measurement of the C-reactive protein (CRP) has largely replaced the ESR. We evaluated the use of CRP in a predictive algorithm. The records of 311 children with an effusion of the hip, which was confirmed on ultrasound, were reviewed (mean age 5.3 years (0.2 to 15.1)). Of these, 269 resolved without intervention and without long-term sequelae and were considered to have had transient synovitis. The remaining 42 underwent arthrotomy because of suspicion of septic arthritis. Infection was confirmed in 29 (18 had micro-organisms isolated and 11 had a high synovial fluid white cell count). In the remaining 13 no evidence of infection was found and they were also considered to have had transient synovitis. In total 29 hips were categorised as septic arthritis and 282 as transient synovitis. The temperature, weight-bearing status, peripheral white blood cell count and CRP was reviewed in each patient. A CRP > 20 mg/l was the strongest independent risk factor for septic arthritis (odds ratio 81.9, p < 0.001). A multivariable prediction model revealed that only two determinants (weight-bearing status and CRP > 20 mg/l) were independent in differentiating septic arthritis from transient synovitis. Individuals with neither predictor had a < 1% probability of septic arthritis, but those with both had a 74% probability of septic arthritis. A two-variable algorithm can therefore quantify the risk of septic arthritis, and is an excellent negative predictor.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 3 | Pages 471 - 476
1 Aug 1963
Adams JA

1. Transient synovitis is an acute, and at times exudative, condition of the synovial membrane. 2. There is no particular association with injury or with upper respiratory infection. 3. The course is short and benign with complete resolution. The occasional hip with chronic or recurrent symptoms can be distinguished from Legg-Perthes' disease by the shorter history, normal radiographs and the complete resolution. 4. There is no evidence that transient synovitis leads to avascular changes in the femoral head


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 2 | Pages 175 - 179
1 May 1975
Brown I

Displacement and blurring of the soft-tissue shadows about the hip has been described in several conditions, particularly in transient synovitis. A study was made between such displacements and the posture commonly adopted by an "irritable hip". Examination of radiographs of normal hips, and of those in cases of transient synovitis and Perthes' disease showed that the appearance of "capsular swelling" is related to the position of lateral rotation and abduction. This was confirmed by anatomical dissections of the lateral plane, which appears to be an intermuscular plane lying anterior to the hip, and an explanation is given for the blurring which may accompany its lateral displacement. "Capsular swelling" appears to be a radiological artefact


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 52-B, Issue 1 | Pages 100 - 107
1 Feb 1970
Hardinge K

A careful study of children with transient synovitis of the hip has failed to establish any connection with infection by staphylococci or streptococci, with allergy, with viral infection and with trauma


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 7 | Pages 900 - 904
1 Jul 2006
Din R Annear P Scaddan J

A total of 11 patients (12 knees) with stable lesions of osteochondritis dissecans of the knee underwent arthroscopic fixation of the fragments using polylactide bioabsorbable pins. The site of the lesion was the medial femoral condyle in ten knees and the lateral femoral condyle in two. The mean age of the patients was 14.8 years (12 to 16). At a mean follow-up of 32.4 months (13 to 38 months) all fragments had MRI evidence of union. One patient developed early transient synovitis, which resolved with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication. All patients returned to sporting activities within eight months of operation and did not require a period of immobilisation


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 3 | Pages 300 - 306
1 Aug 1980
Sutherland A Savage J Paterson D Foster B

The nuclide bone-scan will reliably diagnose Perthes' disease with a sensitivity of 0.98 and a specificity of 0.95. The comparable figures for radiographic sensitivity and specificity are respectively 0.92 and 0.78. In addition, it is possible on the scan to recognise the onset of revascularisation of the femoral capital epiphysis some months before there are radiographic signs of new bone formation. Scintigraphy also suggests that in some cases of transient synovitis there may bae a period of reversible ischaemia of the capital epiphysis, which may have relevance to the pathogenesis of Perthes' disease


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 6 | Pages 1029 - 1034
1 Nov 1999
Fischer SU Beattie TF

We investigated the epidemiology, assessment and outcome of acute atraumatic limp in 243 children under the age of 14 years presenting to a paediatric accident and emergency department (AED) over a period of six months. Data were collected at presentation and medical notes were re-examined after 18 to 21 months. The incidence of limp was 1.8 per thousand. The male:female ratio was 1.7:1 and the median age 4.35 years. Limp was mainly right-sided (54%) and painful (80%); 33.7% of the children had localised pain in the hip. A preceding illness was found in 40%. The main diagnosis was ‘irritable hip’/transient synovitis (39.5%); Perthes’ disease accounted for 2%. Most patients (77%) were managed entirely in the AED. Acute atraumatic limp is a common problem in children presenting to the AED. Most can be safely managed there if guidelines are followed and will have a benign outcome. Further studies are needed to identify the role of preceding illness in the aetiology of acute atraumatic limp


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 4 | Pages 549 - 553
1 Jul 1990
Bickerstaff D Neal L Booth A Brennan P Bell M

We made a prospective study of 111 children with acute hip pain to assess whether ultrasound can replace traditional radiography. An effusion was diagnosed in 71% by ultrasound but in only 15% by radiography. This effusion persisted for a mean of nine days; symptoms lasted for five days. Two patients found to have Perthes' disease had longer-lasting effusion and symptoms. Patients without an effusion had no obvious cause for their pain, so the pressure of an effusion from a transient synovitis does not account for all patients with irritable hips. Patients with an effusion persisting for over 24 days (the mean + 2 s.d. of our series) had more symptoms, a significantly larger effusion and greater limitation of movement. They may be more at risk for avascular necrosis. We found that radiographic examination influenced the immediate management of only two patients, those with Perthes' disease. We therefore propose a protocol of management for irritable hip, using ultrasonography at the first presentation of certain categories of patients. This would reduce the number of early radiographs by 75%


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 3 | Pages 462 - 470
1 Aug 1963
Fernandez de Valderrama JA

1. The term "observation hip" refers to a form of hip disease affecting children and adolescents, the most significant features being the transient nature of the symptoms and the absence of a bony or cartilaginous lesion on radiographic examination. 2. With a view to determining the possible sequelae of the disorder, twenty-three patients aged between two and fifteen years at the onset of the condition were studied fifteen to thirty years later. 3. Varying degrees of coxa magna, osteoarthritis or simple broadening of the femoral neck in the "observed" hip joint were found in the radiographs of twelve of the twenty-three patients studied. 4. This analysis suggests that the " observation hip" syndrome is the result ofan inflammatory process ofthejoint due to varied etiology, whether from injury or infection. The developmental and degenerative changes which may occur are a consequence of hypervascularisation of the bone. Thus changes may develop without necessarily producing the epiphysial necrosis characteristic of the first stage of ischaemia in Legg-Calvé-Perthes' disease. 5. The persistence of this stage of hypervascularity, and therefore the possible outcome of the transient synovitis, may be conditioned by the age at onset of the pathological process, the severity of the condition, and the duration of the symptoms and signs


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 1 | Pages 64 - 81
1 Feb 1966
Stillman BC

Both osteochondritis dissecans and coxa plana are diseases with identical pathological changes, namely avascular necrosis. Although the etiology is not known in either case, it seems likely that when the etiological factors are fully determined they will prove to be applicable to either condition. The relative importance of each etiological factor in the multiple pathogenesis of these two conditions is almost certainly different in each disease process, and probably in each individual case. Present day concepts suggest that there is an underlying constitutional disturbance, which is associated with other factors (of which trauma is almost universally accepted as being one; perhaps the only one), to predispose the individual to these conditions. It is hoped that further studies along these lines will not only help to provide a better understanding of the two conditions mentioned above, but will also be of value in the appreciation of the pathogenesis and etiology of a large number of disturbances including such varied conditions as dysplasia epiphysialis multiplex congenita, cretinoid dysgenesis of the capital femoral epiphysis, adolescent coxa vara, transient synovitis of the hip, and the recently discussed (Merle d'Aubigné 1964) idiopathic avascular necrosis of the femoral head in adults. That there is an etiological relationship between osteochondritis dissecans and coxa plana seems clear, but much more work is required before we will have at hand the patho-physiological evidence that will permit an accurate correlation of these two conditions


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 7 | Pages 815 - 820
1 Jul 2023
Mitchell PD Abraham A Carpenter C Henman PD Mavrotas J McCaul J Sanghrajka A Theologis T

Aims

The aim of this study was to determine the consensus best practice approach for the investigation and management of children (aged 0 to 15 years) in the UK with musculoskeletal infection (including septic arthritis, osteomyelitis, pyomyositis, tenosynovitis, fasciitis, and discitis). This consensus can then be used to ensure consistent, safe care for children in UK hospitals and those elsewhere with similar healthcare systems.

Methods

A Delphi approach was used to determine consensus in three core aspects of care: 1) assessment, investigation, and diagnosis; 2) treatment; and 3) service, pathways, and networks. A steering group of paediatric orthopaedic surgeons created statements which were then evaluated through a two-round Delphi survey sent to all members of the British Society for Children’s Orthopaedic Surgery (BSCOS). Statements were only included (‘consensus in’) in the final agreed consensus if at least 75% of respondents scored the statement as critical for inclusion. Statements were discarded (‘consensus out’) if at least 75% of respondents scored them as not important for inclusion. Reporting these results followed the Appraisal Guidelines for Research and Evaluation.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 3 | Pages 584 - 588
1 Mar 2021
Khattak M Vellathussery Chakkalakumbil S Stevenson RA Bryson DJ Reidy MJ Talbot CL George H

Aims

The aim of this study was to determine the extent to which patient demographics, clinical presentation, and blood parameters vary in Kingella kingae septic arthritis when compared with those of other organisms, and whether this difference needs to be considered when assessing children in whom a diagnosis of septic arthritis is suspected.

Methods

A prospective case series was undertaken at a single UK paediatric institution between October 2012 and November 2018 of all patients referred with suspected septic arthritis. We recorded the clinical, biochemical, and microbiological findings in all patients.