Paediatric bone and joint infections in French Guiana: A 6 year retrospective review

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Abstract

The epidemiology of paediatric bone and joint infections from South America is poorly known. We herein report a retrospective study conducted in whole French Guiana from January 2010 to December 2015. Medical charts of 55 previously healthy children were analysed, identifying 27 with osteomyelitis, 22 with septic arthritis and 6 with multifocal infections and/or osteoarthritis. The male:female ratio was 2.2:1, and the mean age was 7.5 years. Eighty percent children were ≥36 months old who had predominantly osteomyelitis related to methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (p < 0.05) in the course of neglected skin infections. Five children presented with multi-systemic infections resulting in one fatality, mainly caused by S. aureus producing Panton-Valentine leucocidin (p < 0.01). In contrast, children aged 6-36 months had more likely culture-negative infections (p < 0.05), septic arthritis and mild clinical and biological features. Further prospective studies are required to better guide rational diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.

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Osei, L., El Houmami, N., Minodier, P., Sika, A., Basset, T., Seligmann, H., … Elenga, N. (2017). Paediatric bone and joint infections in French Guiana: A 6 year retrospective review. Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, 63(5), 380–388. https://doi.org/10.1093/tropej/fmw102

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