The British Journal of Rheumatology, Vol 36, 1116-1117, Copyright © 1997 by British Society for Rheumatology
B Pal, EJ Nash, B Oppenheim, S Maxwell and L McFarlane
An estimated third of rheumatologists send aspirated synovial fluid samples
for culture routinely during the course of management of their patients
irrespective of the underlying diagnosis. This is done apparently even when
sepsis is not suspected. This audit of 507 synovial fluid culture requests
revealed that positive bacterial growth was rare even when sepsis was
queried on the request forms but none was positive in any of the routine
samples. Our findings throw doubt on the value of routine synovial fluid
culture. We recommend that such cultures are undertaken when infection is a
possibility and in immuno- compromised patients. An average health district
would save pounds 3000 per annum if such a policy was adopted, but across
the National Health Service as a whole the total expenditure saved on this
unnecessary investigation would be considerable.
ORIGINAL PAPERS
Routine synovial fluid culture: is it necessary? Lessons from an audit
Department of Rheumatology, South Manchester University Hospitals NHS Trust (SMUHT).
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