Acute monoarthritis in children: clinical and laboratory factors distinguishing septic arthritis from noninfectious arthritis
Tarih
2023Yazar
Omeroglu, R. N.
Kilic, A.
Demirel, O. Bayrak
DEMİREL, Mehmet
Torun, S. Hancerli
Bilgili, F.
Üst veri
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OBJECTIVE: Distinguishing septic arthritis from specific inflammatory arthritis in children with acute monoarthritis can be a clinical challenge. This study aimed to assess the diagnostic performance of presenting clin-ical and laboratory findings for distinguishing septic arthritis from common forms of nonin-fectious inflammatory arthritis in children with acute monoarthritis. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Children presented for the first episode of monoarthritis were retrospectively reviewed and then divided into two groups: (1) the septic group, 57 children with true septic arthritis, and (2) the non-septic group, 60 children with several types of nonin-fectious inflammatory arthritis. Several clinical findings and serum inflammatory markers on admission were documented. RESULTS: Univariate analyses demonstrated that body temperature, weight-bearing status, C-reactive protein (CRP), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), white blood cell count (WCC), absolute neutrophil count (ANC), and neutrophil percentage (NP) levels were significantly higher in the septic group than in the non-septic group (p = 63 mg/L is the best independent predictor of septic arthritis among the commonly used serum inflammatory markers (ESR, WCC, ANP, NP). It should be borne in mind that a child with zero predictors may still have a 4.3% risk of septic arthritis. Thus, clinical assessment is still imperative in managing children presenting with acute mono-arthritis.
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