infection
Septic arthritis
Acute septic , arthritis, suppurative arthritis, pyogenic arthritis, osteomyelitis, or joint is the invasion of a joint by an infectious agent resulting in joint . Generally speaking, symptoms typically include redness, heat and pain in a single joint associated with a decreased ability to move the joint. Onset is usually rapid. Other symptoms may include fever, weakness and headache. Occasionally, more than one joint may be involved, especially in neonates, younger children and immunocompromised individuals. In neonates, infants during the first year of life, and toddlers, the signs and symptoms of septic arthritis can be deceptive and mimic other infectious and non-infectious disorders.
Underlined words are explained — tap any of them.
Symptoms — what it feels like
- ·Red, hot, painful single joint
Causes — why it happens
- ·, viruses, fungi,
How it's found
- ·Joint with
Treatment
- ·,
Outlook
- ·15% risk of death (treatment), 66% risk of death (without treatment)
More in Joints
OsteoarthritisRheumatoid arthritisGoutAnkylosing spondylitisLupus (SLE)Carpal tunnel syndromePsoriatic arthritisPlantar fasciitisFrozen shoulderPseudogoutJuvenile idiopathic arthritisRotator cuff tear
See all of Joints →Plain-language summary adapted from Wikipedia. Not medical advice.