Osteomyelitis and Intraosteoblastic Staphylococcus aureus

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Chronic osteomyelitis is a disease process that is characterized not infrequently by periods of clinical quiescence interspersed by symptomatic episodes of varying duration and severity. These periods of clinical quiescence have been attributed to several possible factors, including effective host defenses that keep the process at bay as well as glycocalyceal sequestration of the implicated pathogen. Recent work has demonstrated a potential third explanation for this phenomenon, that is, intracellular incorporation of the pathogen within the host osteoblast. This is a report of a successful osteoblast cell culture demonstrating the facultative intraosteoblastic location of a human osteomyelitis Staphylococcus aureus isolate as well as its microscopic features. (Journal of Surgical Orthopaedic Advances 16(2):73–78, 2007)

SKU: JSOA-2007-16-2-SU4 Categories: , Tags: , , , ,

Lawrence X. Webb, MD; William Wagner, PhD; David Carroll, PhD; Holly Tyler, BS;
Faith Coldren, BS; Eileen Martin; The Multidisciplinary Collaboration for the Study
of Inflammation and Repair (MCSIR)