Pseudotumor is an infrequent manifestation of bleeding diathesis seen in hemophiliacs, the management of which is still controversial. To ascertain the effectiveness of the main therapies of choice, we have reviewed 1,831 patients affected by hemophilias A (1,108) and B (172), von Willebrand's disease (329), and other miscellaneous coagulopathies (222) diagnosed between 1965 and 1990 in a multicentric, retrospective study. Pseudotumor was proven in 21 patients. Replacement therapy was given in 15 cases as the first therapeutic approach, with complete success attained in only two, whereas surgery, which was carried out in 14 patients, completely resolved the process in eight (P = 0.017). Patients over 40 years of age demonstrated worse prognosis than younger patients (P = 0.02), but no other clinical parameters were shown to have influenced the patients' evolution. Surgical management was the most effective treatment for pseudotumor, although more conservative therapies cannot be overlooked in selected cases.
Osteoarticular complications are common in patients with chronic renal failure and they often require implantation of a hip arthroplasty (total or partial) due to osteoarthritis, femoral neck fracture or ischemic necrosis of multifactor aetiology. Between 1992 and 2005 we operated on eighteen patients (23 hips) with chronic renal failure who were receiving renal replacement therapy (ten haemodialysis and eight renal transplants), and in each case either a total or partial hip arthroplasty was implanted. This group comprised nine women and nine men, with a mean age of 56 years (range: 30-83). Five cases were bilateral. The clinical diagnoses were necrosis (fourteen cases), femoral neck fracture (five cases) and osteoarthritis (three cases). The main early complications were haemorrhage in seventeen cases (74%) and infection in six cases (33%) (two urinary infections and four of the surgical wound). The late complications involved eight cases (35%) of prosthetic loosening (five aseptic and three septic). The surgery-related mortality rate was 17% (three cases). Prosthetic hip surgery in patients receiving renal replacement therapy is associated with high morbidity and mortality, thus highlighting the importance of careful patient selection.
Intraoperative histology has a high specificity and sensitivity when a septic prosthesis loosening is suspected. However, its usefulness to predict the presence of microorganisms when aseptic loosening is suspected is not well defined. Intraoperative histology and cultures from periprosthetic tissue of 61 revision arthroplasties performed owing to suspected aseptic loosening were retrospectively reviewed. Frozen sections were evaluated following Mirra's criteria (adapted by Feldman). Culture was considered positive when the same microorganism was isolated in at least two samples. The cultures were positive in 12 cases and coagulasenegative staphylococci were the most common microorganisms (11 cases). In six out of 12 cases (50%), the histology revealed more than five polymorphonuclear leukocytes per high-power field. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value of histology to detect the presence of microorganisms was 50, 81, 40 and 86%, respectively. In conclusion, intraoperative histology using Mirra's criteria had a low sensitivity to predict the presence of microorganisms in samples from suspected aseptic prosthetic loosening.
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