ESR in childhood septic arthritis

Date First Published:
September 9, 2000
Last Updated:
July 11, 2001
Report by:
Russel Boyd, Consultant in Emergency Medicine (MRI)
Search checked by:
Bruce Martin, MRI
Three-Part Question:
In [children presenting with acute hip pain] is [a raised ESR] useful in [diagnosing septic arthritis]?
Clinical Scenario:
A 3 year old child presents to the emergency department with a short history of limp, temperature and difficulty in weight bearing on the left leg. The pain is principally located at the hip joint and you fear this may be a septic arthritis. You wonder if an Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR) will help in excluding the diagnosis of septic arthritis.
Search Strategy:
Medline 1966-12/00 using the OVID interface.
Search Details:
{[(exp child OR children.mp OR pediatrics OR paediatric.mp OR pediatric.mp) AND (exp hip OR exp hip joint OR hip.mp OR exp arthritis, infectious OR exp osteomyelitis OR septic arthritis.mp)] AND (exp laboratory techniques and procedures OR laboratory techniques.mp OR exp ultrasonography OR exp blood cell count OR exp c-reactive protein)} AND maximally sensitive diagnostic filter LIMIT to human and english.
Outcome:
334 papers found of which 329 were irrelevant or of insufficient quality. The remaining 5 papers are shown in the table.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title Patient Group Study type (level of evidence) Outcomes Key results Study Weaknesses
Septic arthritis versus transient synovitis of the hip: the value of screening laboratory tests. Del Beccaro MA, Champoux AN, Bockers T et al. 1992, USA 138 children age 2.5 weeks to 12 years admitted with acute hip pain Diagnostic test study Septic arthritis of the hip Sensitivity 79% Retrospective chart review including neonates. Gold standard not universally applied.
Raised ESR alone Sensitivity 97%
Raised ESR and temperature
Management of irritable hip: a review of hospital admission policy. Taylor GR, Clarke NM. 1994, UK 417 consecutive paediatric admissions with hip pain identified on retrospective chart review Diagnostic test study Septic arthritis of the hip Sensitivity 90.5% Diagnostic tests were not universally applied. Numbers do not appear to add up
Raised ESR alone Sensitivity 97%
Raised ESR and temperature or severe spasm/tenderness
The irritable hip: immediate ultrasound guided aspiration and prevention of hospital admission. Fink AM, Berman L, Edwards D et al. 1995, England 50 consecutive children age 1-10 years with acute hip pain Diagnostic test study Septic arthritis of the hip Sensitivity 100% Number too small to be meaningful. Only 1 case of septic arthritis found
Raised ESR alone
The painful hip:evaluation of criteria for clinical decision making. Eich GF, Superti-Furga A, Umbricht FS et al. 1999, Switzerland 114 children with acute hip pain Diagnostic test study Septic arthritis of the hip Sensitivity not given 14 patients excluded due to loss of data. Retrospective identification of cases.
Raised ESR alone Sensitivity 100%
Raised ESR and temperature or CRP
Differentiating between septic Arthritis and transient synovitis of the hip in children. Kocher MS, Zurakowski D, Kasser JR. 1999, USA 282 children with diagnosis of irritable hip Diagnostic test study Septic arthritis of the hip Sensitivity not given Cohort identified retrospectively
Raised ESR alone Sensitivity 99.6%
Raised ESR and temperature and WCC and inabilty to weight bear
Author Commentary:
An isolated ESR is of variable sensitivity and not suitable to rule-out septic arthritis, however in combination with an elevated temperature and inability to weight bear or reduced mobility it becomes a useful rule-out tool with sensitivities consistently above 95%.
Bottom Line:
An isolated ESR test cannot exclude septic arthritis. In combination with temperature and ability to weight bear it can be used as a SnOut.
References:
  1. Del Beccaro MA, Champoux AN, Bockers T et al.. Septic arthritis versus transient synovitis of the hip: the value of screening laboratory tests.
  2. Taylor GR, Clarke NM.. Management of irritable hip: a review of hospital admission policy.
  3. Fink AM, Berman L, Edwards D et al.. The irritable hip: immediate ultrasound guided aspiration and prevention of hospital admission.
  4. Eich GF, Superti-Furga A, Umbricht FS et al.. The painful hip:evaluation of criteria for clinical decision making.
  5. Kocher MS, Zurakowski D, Kasser JR.. Differentiating between septic Arthritis and transient synovitis of the hip in children.