Facebook Pixel

Infectious Arthritis, Part 2

 
Rate This

As we so painfully learned on Monday, infectious arthritis can and will effect anybody at any age, especially under certain medical conditions. But, what the majority of people don’t know is that this type of infection is considered a medical emergency, and must be treated immediately. With that, there are certain symptoms about this kind of infection that should trigger your instincts to get medical attention as soon as possible.

Some symptoms that may not register quite as quickly that there is indeed a severe infection building, include chills, fatigue, and a small fever. All these can be easily mistaken for the common flu that people are not so quick to seek medical attention for, especially without health insurance. However, you should consider yourself in need of urgent care if you are unable to move a joint, have severe pain in a joint, increased swelling, redness or tenderness to the touch. These are surefire signs of septic arthritis, so do not pass go and do not collect your $200 (monopoly anyone?), just get yourself straight to a medical facility.

There are a few different approaches a doctor can take to examine the inflamed joint, which include blood tests, MRI and X-ray. However, to establish exactly which type of bacteria is causing the infection, a fluid sample is drawn from the site of the infection. This procedure is called arthrocentesis, which most women can compare to a amniocentesis, or taking fluid from the amniotic sac to test a child’s chromosomes. This course of action allows the doctor to determine which type of antibiotics you should go on because certain bacteria require different types of antibiotics. If your doctor finds the infection resorts back to fungi, in addition to antibiotics, you will be put on an anti-fungal. However, if your doctor diagnoses your infectious arthritis sourcing from a virus, well then there is no particular course of treatment. You unfortunately just have to ride it out with a little bed rest and anti-inflammatory.

Another common procedure vital to your recovery is draining the infected fluid from the joint via surgery. Often, a person will need multiple procedures depending on the severity and location of the infection. Although uncomfortable, this will ease the pressure off your joint and eliminate some of the infection so your odds of the joint being destroyed go down significantly.

If not treated properly and immediately, infectious arthritis can destroy your joint within days and possibly put your body in septic shock, which can lead to fatality. Therefore, it is absolutely imperative to get on antibiotics as soon as the infection is detected because the consequences of this untreated infection can turn from severe to fatal in a matter of hours. This is exactly why this type of infection is considered a medical emergency-your life can depend on it. With this information, it is my hope that you are now more adept to make an informed decision about contacting your doctor when even the smallest symptoms of infectious arthritis arise.

After doing a lot of research and studying the different forms of arthritis, I have come to realize that life in general takes a real toll of our mind and body. Arthritis is just one medical complication that can arise with age and circumstance and I absolutely cannot say enough how crucial it is to our well being to take care of ourselves and not assume nature will always take its course to recovery. Sometimes you have to bite the bullet and understand you not invincible to anything. So be kind to your body and it, in return will (hopefully) be kind to you.

Add a CommentComments

There are no comments yet. Be the first one and get the conversation started!

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
By submitting this form, you agree to EmpowHER's terms of service and privacy policy

We value and respect our HERWriters' experiences, but everyone is different. Many of our writers are speaking from personal experience, and what's worked for them may not work for you. Their articles are not a substitute for medical advice, although we hope you can gain knowledge from their insight.

Infectious Arthritis

Get Email Updates

Related Topics

Health Newsletter

Receive the latest and greatest in women's health and wellness from EmpowHER - for free!