Abstract

IntroductionInfected pubic symphysitis (IPS) is a rare bacterial infection of the pubic symphysis that causes subpubic pain, disability and ultimately permanent immobility. Due to difficult diagnosis, patients present with long-standing complaints and consult several doctors. To date, no validated treatment protocol exists and most patients are treated conservatively with antibiotics. This study was aimed to assess the results after careful surgical debridement and pathogen-specific antibiotic treatment in IPS.Materials and methodsA chart review of eight patients with proven IPS was performed. Five of eight patients filled in a specific own-developed questionnaire and could be examined clinically and radiologically at a mean of 13 months (range: 6–30 months) postoperatively.ResultsThere were six males and two females with an average age of 69 years (range: 55–80 years). The mean duration of symptoms before surgical treatment was 10.5 months (range: 1–30 months). There were no complications due to the surgical debridement. There was no recurrence of infection at the pubic symphysis during the follow-up period. The most common pathogen was Pseudomonas aeruginosa in three patients. Mean preoperative pain, measured on the visual analogue scale (VAS, range: 0–10) for the four analysed categories in the five follow-up patients was 7.2, 30 days postoperatively 2.7 and 13 months postoperatively 0.4. There was a steady increase in the quality of life (QoL) 30 days postoperatively and at the 13 months follow-up when compared to preoperative values.ConclusionsSurgical debridement is the keystone for treatment of IPS and should be combined with local and systemic antibiotic therapy.

Highlights

  • Infected pubic symphysitis (IPS) is a rare bacterial infection of the pubic symphysis that causes subpubic pain, disability and permanent immobility

  • We found that surgical debridement with careful preservation of the pubic ligaments and a course of postoperative antibiotics had excellent results in patients with ISP

  • This causes a confusion of data, where beginning IPS can be misdiagnosed as osteitis pubis when no bacteriology is taken

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Summary

Introduction

Infected pubic symphysitis (IPS) is a rare bacterial infection of the pubic symphysis that causes subpubic pain, disability and permanent immobility. Mean preoperative pain, measured on the visual analogue scale (VAS, range: 0–10) for the four analysed categories in the five follow-up patients was 7.2, 30 days postoperatively 2.7 and 13 months postoperatively 0.4. Infected pubic symphysitis (IPS), a bacterial infection of the symphysis pubis, is a rare condition that causes disability, hospitalization and may require emergent therapy. Symphysis-related pubalgia can be caused by pubic osteitis, its more common aseptic counterpart [3, 4]. In both entities, patients present with pain on ambulation, severe pubic and groin discomfort and gait instability; only IPS can present with fever [5].

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