Abstract

This study provides information on clinical features, diagnosis, treatment and associated risk factors of spontaneous septic elbow arthritis in the dog. Medical records between March 2007 and June 2015 were searched for cases of spontaneous septic elbow arthritis with a diagnosis based on clinical signs, arthrocentesis, cytological and microbiological analysis of elbow joint synovial fluid, radiography and outcome following treatment. Twenty-one cases of septic arthritis were identified. Pre-existing osteoarthritis was present in 14/15 elbows for which diagnostic imaging was available. Although all cases had increased neutrophil count on synovial fluid cytology, culture was only positive in 12/21. Despite initial improvement in lameness scores (pre-treatment 9/10 [range: 1-10] versus post-treatment 3/10 [range: 1-5]), 11/12 had residual long-term lameness. Recurrence of infection was noted in 3/12 elbows for which long-term (>8 weeks) follow-up was available. There was an acute mortality rate of 2/21 associated with severe systemic sepsis. Septic arthritis, even in the absence of pyrexia, should be considered as a major differential diagnosis in middle aged, large breed dogs, with pre-existing elbow arthritis, that suffer an acute onset lameness, with elbow joint effusion and discomfort. Antibiotic therapy alone was effective for treatment with high initial response rates. Chronic lameness post-treatment was common, and a high rate of recurrence was seen with 3/12 dogs suffering more than one episode.

Highlights

  • Septic arthritis is considered an uncommon condition that can significantly impact the quality of a dog’s life [1]

  • One case was excluded based on repeat synovial fluid analysis consistent with an immune-mediated process, resulting in a total of 21 elbows meeting the inclusion criteria for spontaneous septic arthritis

  • A preliminary review of all cases of septic arthritis was performed during data collection for this manuscript

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Summary

Introduction

Septic arthritis is considered an uncommon condition that can significantly impact the quality of a dog’s life [1]. Septic arthritis is an active joint infection, which is usually bacterial in origin and results in an acute inflammation of the joint, with swelling, pain and lameness [1, 2]. The term spontaneous is used in this report to describe infections in which there has been no known recent surgical or traumatic episode to the afflicted joint and the infection is presumed haematogenous in origin [4]. A clear joint predilection of septic arthritis in dogs has not been established for cases of spontaneous infection. In which surgical related infection is variably included, the stifle is most commonly affected 16.1 – 73.7%, with the elbow showing variable predilection rates of 12.9

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