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What is your approach to monitoring of inflammatory markers during treatment of native vertebral osteomyelitis?

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Infectious Disease · Stanford Health Care

As long as the patient is clinically stable and CRP is coming down, there is generally no need for follow up imaging. Key reference: Kowalski et al., PMID 16779743.

Also, good to remember that ESR is a very expensive test which basically measures fibrinogen (may cost $500 or more since it has to be r...

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Infectious Disease · Beebe Infectious Disease

Yes, I do check CRP once weekly. Like Dr. @Dr. First Last - I try VERY hard NOT to order any follow-up MRI imaging - I also recommend the Kowalski paper from CID 2006 that Dr. Winslow referenced. Kowalski's definition of "improved CRP" was only that there was a 25% decrease at 4-8 weeks of follow-up...

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Infectious Disease · Cooperman Barnabas Medical Center

I have found ESR much more reliable the CRP. For years, I ordered both. I was trying to determine whether CRP added information not provided by the ESR. I found it didn't. The CRP in our experience falls more quickly and in everyone. The ESR has issues, for sure, but if you get a very high ESR, it i...

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Infectious Disease · Massachusetts General Hospital

For those that monitor weekly inflammatory marker(s), can I ask: how does it change your management when patients improve clinically but markers do not fall satisfactorily? Do you get follow-up imaging? Do you extend antibiotics? Both of these maneuvers seem to have the potential for harm in someone...

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Infectious Disease · Stanford Health Care

Standard is to monitor inflammatory markers. IDSA has good guidelines for the management of NVO.

Berbari et al., PMID 26229122

One thing I would emphasize is that you should follow only CRP as an inflammatory marker. ESR provides no additional information. CRP is much more sensitive and specific for ...

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What is your approach to monitoring of inflammatory markers during treatment of native vertebral osteomyelitis? | Mednet