Borrelia burgdorferi-A Bacterium Worthy of Consideration in Culture-Negative Prosthetic Joint Infection
- PMID: 37707984
- PMCID: PMC10503676
- DOI: 10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-23-00068
Borrelia burgdorferi-A Bacterium Worthy of Consideration in Culture-Negative Prosthetic Joint Infection
Abstract
A 68-year-old woman presented to the orthopaedic office with 2 weeks of atraumatic right prosthetic knee pain and swelling. She previously lived pain free and fully functional after a total knee arthroplasty 8 years ago. Initial radiographs showed a small joint effusion, and serum inflammatory markers were elevated. Arthrocentesis yielded 12ccs of culture-negative cloudy serous fluid containing 3,270 white blood cells, 92% polymorphonuclear neutrophils. The patient underwent prosthesis explant, antibiotic spacer placement, and began empiric IV antibiotic therapy as stage one of a planned two-stage revision. Intraoperative tissue cultures were negative, and the postoperative plan was to continue IV vancomycin for a total of 6 weeks. Two weeks post-op, serum Lyme antibody testing returned positive. The patient was switched to doxycycline and ceftriaxone for a total duration of 4 weeks, followed by a successful second-stage revision and remains asymptomatic after 1 year. Five cases of culture-negative prosthetic joint infections caused by the spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi, have been reported in the orthopaedic literature.1-4 We present a sixth case, occurring in a 68-year-old woman in Northwestern Pennsylvania, 8 years after a primary right total knee arthroplasty.
Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
Conflict of interest statement
None of the following authors or any immediate family member has received anything of value from or has stock or stock options held in a commercial company or institution related directly or indirectly to the subject of this article: Dr. Crowe, Dr. Giacobazzi, Dr. Griffin, and Dr. Storm.
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