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Detection of occult infection following total joint arthroplasty using sequential technetium-99m HDP bone scintigraphy and indium-111 WBC imaging.
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1988
Year
DiagnosisSurgeryOrthopaedic SurgeryIndium-111 Wbc ImagingTotal Joint ArthroplastyOsteoarthritisOrthopaedicsJoint ReplacementLaboratory MedicineRadiologyHealth SciencesOccult InfectionMedical ImagingMusculoskeletal ImagingSpecificity 95Periprosthetic InfectionMedical DiagnosticsBone ImagingMedicineProsthetic Joint InfectionsSkeletal Imaging
Preoperative exclusion or confirmation of periprosthetic infection is essential for correct surgical management of patients with suspected infected joint prostheses. The sensitivity and specificity of [111In]WBC imaging in the diagnosis of infected total joint prostheses was examined in 28 patients and compared with sequential [99mTc]HDP/[111In]WBC scintigraphy and aspiration arthrography. The sensitivity of preoperative aspiration cultures was 12%, with a specificity of 81% and an accuracy of 58%. The sensitivity of [111In]WBC imaging alone was 100%, with a specificity of 50% and an accuracy of 65%. When correlated with the bone scintigraphy and read as sequential [99mTc]HDP/[111In]WBC imaging, the sensitivity was 88%, specificity 95%, and accuracy 93%. This study demonstrates that [111In]WBC imaging is an extremely sensitive imaging modality for the detection of occult infection of joint prostheses. It also demonstrates the necessity of correlating [111In]WBC images with [99mTc]HDP skeletal scintigraphy in the detection of occult periprosthetic infection.