Cargando manchetes…

Multiligamentous Knee Reconstruction Complicated by Septic Arthritis Following Cosmetic Surgery, A Case Report.

Moore M, Zeppieri G, Roach R, Rademacher M.

Resumen ejecutivo en español

📌 TL;DR: Caso de septicemia post-cirugía cosmetica con reconstrucción multiligamento del muslo.

🔬 Puntos clave:

🎯 Aplicación clínica para LATAM:
Este caso ilustra la importancia de considerar la posibilidad de septicemia en pacientes con dolor y edema en el muslo, especialmente después de cirugías electivas. En América Latina, donde frecuentemente se realizan procedimientos cosmetológicos inmediatamente tras cirugía ortopédica, es crucial mantener una vigilancia constante.

⚠ Limitaciones:
La muestra fue un caso único y no representa a poblaciones amplias de pacientes con este tipo de lesión.

Abstract original

Background and purpose

Multiligamentous knee injuries present challenges to surgeons and rehabilitation specialists. Challenges can be complicated by postoperative infections, which impact patient outcomes. The knee stability and movement coordination impairments in this case are consistent with the Knee Ligament Sprain Clinical Practice Guideline, which provides a clinical framework for rehabilitation decision making following complex ligament reconstructions. This case report describes the rehabilitation management and outcomes following multiligament knee reconstruction complicated by septic arthritis after elective cosmetic surgery performed shortly after an orthopedic surgery.

Case description

A 22-year-old female recreational athlete (runner and gymnast) sustained a right tibiofemoral dislocation after a motor vehicle accident. A staged surgical approach was performed with posterolateral corner reconstruction followed by anterior and posterior cruciate ligament reconstruction four months later. Eight weeks after cruciate ligament reconstruction, the patient underwent elective cosmetic surgery with autologous fat grafting from the thigh. She developed a sudden onset of right knee pain and swelling and was diagnosed with septic arthritis. Arthroscopic irrigation, debridement, synovectomy, and intravenous antibiotics were administered. Rehabilitation progressed through a multi-phased protocol based on tissue healing and clinical readiness. Patient-reported outcomes included the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC), the ACL Return to Sport After Injury (ACL-RSI), and the Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Yellow Flag (OSPRO-YF) and isokinetic testing.

Outcomes

The patient completed 36 sessions over 63 weeks from arthroscopic irrigation to the final physical therapy visit. IKDC increased by 17.24 points (MCID = 9.5), and ACL-RSI improved by 30 points (MIC = 15.1). OSPRO-YF decreased from five yellow flags to three. Isokinetic testing revealed a quadriceps peak torque-to-body weight ratio of 84.2%, with a limb symmetry index of 96.6%, surpassing normative values. She returned to an interval running program at 16 weeks and resumed coaching gymnastics at 28 weeks post-irrigation.

Discussion

This case highlights infection as a critical differential diagnosis in patients presenting with a painful knee effusion and describes septic arthritis occurring after an elective procedure performed shortly following orthopedic surgery.

Level of evidence

4.

Cómo citar:
Moore M, Zeppieri G, Roach R, Rademacher M. (2026). Multiligamentous Knee Reconstruction Complicated by Septic Arthritis Following Cosmetic Surgery, A Case Report.. International journal of sports physical therapy.
DOI: 10.26603/001c.157583 ↗
PMID: 41777439 ↗
Acceso al paper: Ver completo ↗

Más artículos relacionados

Rehabilitación

A rehabilitation programme performed in darkness after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction reduces the risk of secondary injuries.

Rehabilitación

ACL Rehabilitation Plateaus Across Athlete Populations: Two Case Reports and a Clinical Framework for Identifying Functional Stagnation.

Rehabilitación

ACL injury in female soccer players: Risk, resilience, and prevention in the modern game.

← Volver a Sport Science