Occasional SurveyDURATION OF ANTIMICROBIAL THERAPY FOR ACUTE SUPPURATIVE OSTEOARTICULAR INFECTIONS
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Cited by (100)
Subperiosteal abscess in a child. Trueta's osteomyelitis hypothesis undermined?
2015, Orthopaedics and Traumatology: Surgery and ResearchOsteoarticular Infections in Children
2015, Infectious Disease Clinics of North AmericaCitation Excerpt :Thirty-five years ago, it was suggested that a transition to oral therapy could be safe and equally effective. Syrogiannopoulos and Nelson10 published data that described the duration of IV and oral antimicrobial therapy and the outcomes and found that combined courses of IV and oral therapy were safe and effective in the range of 4 to 6 weeks. However, the initial duration of IV therapy was not precisely defined, and for decades to follow the original dogma of long IV courses of therapy remained the rule for many physicians.
Intravenous antibiotic therapy for acute hematogenous osteomyelitis in children: Short versus long course
2013, Archives de PediatrieShort parenteral antibiotic treatment for adult septic arthritis after successful drainage
2013, International Journal of Infectious DiseasesClindamycin vs. first-generation cephalosporins for acute osteoarticular infections of childhood-a prospective quasi-randomized controlled trial
2012, Clinical Microbiology and InfectionCitation Excerpt :No comparative data deriving from a sufficiently powered trial on antimicrobials have previously been available. Clinicians have based the treatment of acute childhood osteoarticular infections—haematogenous osteomyelitis (OM), septic arthritis (SA), and the osteomyelitis–arthritis (OM–SA) combination—on retrospective case series, reviews, and their own experience [1–6]. The two largest series on OM comprised only 80 [7] and 64 [8] subjects.
Osteomyelitis
2012, Principles and Practice of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Fourth Edition
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Present address: Department of Pediatrics, University of Patras, School of Medicine, PO Box 1045, 26110 Patras, Greece.