Finegoldia magna: An Infrequent Guest in Orthopedic Infections.

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q4 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Santiago Gabardo, Cristina Ortega-Portas, Jaime Esteban, Antonio Blanco-García, Álvaro Auñón
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Abstract

Background: Finegoldia magna is a species of anaerobic gram-positive coccus considered part of human microbiota. It has been described as a cause of skin and soft tissue infections, but it is not a common cause of operation-related infections. Objectives: Describe the characteristics, treatment, and results of musculoskeletal infection by F. magna treated in our center. Methods: We performed a descriptive, retrospective observational study. Clinical records of all musculoskeletal surgical infections treated in our department between 2012 and 2022 were reviewed. We selected the patients with a positive culture for F. magna. Risk factors for infection, patient's medical records, previous operation performed, time from surgical procedure to infection, susceptibility tests, antibiotic and surgical treatment for the infection, and recovery rate were registered for the analysis. Results: Twenty patients have positive cultures for F. magna, representing 15.5% of the anaerobic infections. Eleven of them were arthroplasties, three fracture synthesis, two foot operations, two spinal operations, and two soft tissue operations. All patients underwent operation and antibiotic treatment. The most commonly used antibiotic scheme was amoxicillin followed by amoxicillin-rifampicin. Eighty percent of the patients achieved a complete clinical recovery with a mean of 2.1 surgical procedures. Patients with polymicrobial infections required twice the number of operations (p = 0.047) and exhibited a failure rate of 36% compared with 0% for monomicrobial cases (p = 0.043). Conclusions: Orthopedic infections caused by F. magna are infrequent, but they usually have good outcomes. Polymicrobial infection with F. magna exhibits poorer clinical results and requires a greater number of operations compared with monomicrobial ones.

蝇蛆:骨科感染中的不速之客
背景:大细叶球菌是一种革兰氏阳性厌氧球菌,被认为是人类微生物群的一部分。它被描述为皮肤和软组织感染的原因,但它不是手术相关感染的常见原因。目的:描述本中心收治的大f型骨骼肌感染的特点、治疗方法和结果。方法:我们进行了一项描述性、回顾性观察性研究。回顾2012年至2022年我科收治的所有肌肉骨骼外科感染病例的临床记录。我们选择培养阳性的患者。记录感染的危险因素、患者的医疗记录、既往手术、从手术到感染的时间、药敏试验、感染的抗生素和手术治疗以及恢复率进行分析。结果:20例患者培养阳性,占厌氧感染的15.5%。其中关节置换术11例,骨折融合术3例,足部手术2例,脊柱手术2例,软组织手术2例。所有患者均接受手术和抗生素治疗。最常用的抗生素方案是阿莫西林,其次是阿莫西林-利福平。80%的患者通过平均2.1次手术获得了完全的临床恢复。多微生物感染患者需要两倍的手术次数(p = 0.047),其失败率为36%,而单微生物感染患者为0% (p = 0.043)。结论:magna F.引起的骨科感染并不常见,但通常预后良好。与单微生物感染相比,多微生物感染的magna表现出较差的临床结果,需要更多的手术次数。
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来源期刊
Surgical infections
Surgical infections INFECTIOUS DISEASES-SURGERY
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
5.00%
发文量
127
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Surgical Infections provides comprehensive and authoritative information on the biology, prevention, and management of post-operative infections. Original articles cover the latest advancements, new therapeutic management strategies, and translational research that is being applied to improve clinical outcomes and successfully treat post-operative infections. Surgical Infections coverage includes: -Peritonitis and intra-abdominal infections- Surgical site infections- Pneumonia and other nosocomial infections- Cellular and humoral immunity- Biology of the host response- Organ dysfunction syndromes- Antibiotic use- Resistant and opportunistic pathogens- Epidemiology and prevention- The operating room environment- Diagnostic studies
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