Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2020)

The Role of Imaging Techniques to Define a Peri-Prosthetic Hip and Knee Joint Infection: Multidisciplinary Consensus Statements

  • Carlo Luca Romanò,
  • Nicola Petrosillo,
  • Giuseppe Argento,
  • Luca Maria Sconfienza,
  • Giorgio Treglia,
  • Abass Alavi,
  • Andor W.J.M. Glaudemans,
  • Olivier Gheysens,
  • Alex Maes,
  • Chiara Lauri,
  • Christopher J. Palestro,
  • Alberto Signore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082548
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 2548

Abstract

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Diagnosing a peri-prosthetic joint infection (PJI) remains challenging despite the availability of a variety of clinical signs, serum and synovial markers, imaging techniques, microbiological and histological findings. Moreover, the one and only true definition of PJI does not exist, which is reflected by the existence of at least six different definitions by independent societies. These definitions are composed of major and minor criteria for defining a PJI, but most of them do not include imaging techniques. This paper highlights the pros and cons of available imaging techniques—X-ray, ultrasound, computed tomography (CT), Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), bone scintigraphy, white blood cell scintigraphy (WBC), anti-granulocyte scintigraphy, and fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT), discusses the added value of hybrid camera systems—single photon emission tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT), PET/CT and PET/MRI and reports consensus answers on important clinical questions that were discussed during the Third European Congress on Inflammation/Infection Imaging in Rome, December 2019.

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