Joint aspirations and injections

 

Attention

  • Do not do unless you have been trained. Medical consult prior to procedure
  • Most common joints to be injected/aspirated are knees, shoulders
    • Principles for joint injection and aspiration the same
    • Be aware of risk of introducing infection — always use aseptic technique
  • Before aspirating for diagnostic reasons — see Joint fluid analysis
  • If aspirating for healing (therapeutic) reasons — remove most of the fluid
  • Local anaesthetic not always needed. Depends on size of needle used
  • Always put needle in parallel to joint surfaces to prevent damage to cartilage
  • Use ultrasound guidance for shoulder injection if available

Note: Leave a bit of air in preloaded syringe. Air can easily be injected into joint but not tissue (strong resistance), helps you know if you are in joint

Circulation and sensation — when finished always check hands/feet (peripheries) for colour, warmth, sensation, movement, swelling, capillary refill, peripheral pulses — F 10.1, to make sure no damage to nerves, arteries or veins.

Syringes and needle sizes

  • Needle size depends on
    • Diagnostic or healing (therapeutic) aspiration
    • How much fluid and how thick
    • Size of joint
  • Always use smallest needle size possible
    • For aspiration usually 21G
    • For injection usually 23G
  • Needle length
    • Long — 32mm for shoulders or knees, 38mm for obese patients
  • Needle and syringe size for aspiration of toe/finger — 25G needle and 3mL syringe
  • Aspiration of knee/shoulder
    • 21G OR 18G needle/cannula if you expect thick or bloody fluid
    • 5mL syringe for diagnostic
    • 10–20mL syringe for healing (therapeutic) aspiration

Do not

  • Do not do joint aspirations if
    • Bacteraemia present
    • Skin infection or severe dermatitis over joint
    • Joint too difficult to reach
    • Severe lack of blood clotting (coagulopathy)
    • Gout in big toe (classic first metatarsophalangeal gout), very painful, not needed for diagnosis
  • Do not do steroid injection if
    • Bacteraemia present
    • Infectious arthritis
    • Close to bone infection (osteomyelitis)
    • Person having joint replacement surgery in less than a week
    • Bleeding into joint (haemarthrosis)

Indications (reasons) for joint aspiration

  • Therapeutic (to help with healing)
    • To relieve symptoms (pain, swelling)
    • To help stop damage to joint caused by infection
  • Diagnostic
    • To improve joint movement so swollen joint can be fully examined
    • To find reason for unexplained fluid build-up in joint

Types of effusions

Bloody effusions

  • Traumatic — most common
    • Bloody aspirate indicates soft tissue or bony injury
    • Fat globules in bloody aspirate indicate joint fracture
    • Usually contain streaks of clotted blood
  • Non-traumatic
    • Include haemophilia, anticoagulant therapy, malignant/benign tumours
    • Fluid is evenly bloody
    • May be caused by traumatic tap during joint aspiration — usually contains streaks and fresher looking blood
    • Don't need to send bloody aspirate to pathology unless you suspect septic arthritis, crystal arthropathy, malignant tumour
  • Non-traumatic effusions are usually non-bloody. Send aspirate to pathology for diagnosis
  • Single inflamed joint could be septic arthritis. Very damaging
    • 20% of people with septic arthritis don’t have a fever
    • 20% of cases of septic arthritis involve more than one joint

What you need

  • Blueys
  • Sterile dressing pack
  • Chlorhexidine 5% in 70% alcohol solution or povidone-iodine antiseptic solution
  • Syringes and needles
  • Sterile needle holder or haemostat clamp (to keep needle still when changing syringes)
  • Small sticking plaster
  • Compression bandage

May need

  • Large pillow
  • 3mL syringe preloaded with local anaesthetic and/or steroid for injection
  • Yellow cap sterile specimen container for aspirate
  • Crutches 

Knee injection/aspiration — medial and superolateral approach

Attention

  • Usually
    • Medial approach for injections and small (diagnostic) aspirations
    • Superolateral approach for large (healing/diagnostic) aspirations
  • Use method you are most comfortable with

What you do

Medial approach

  • Lie person on back with knee bent 45–90° over bluey-covered large pillow
  • Find site for aspiration/injection —  Figure 10.83
  • Mark injection site by making indentation with tip of syringe
  • Lay out dressing pack and equipment
  • Wash hands and put on sterile gloves
  • Disinfect site and drape with sterile towels
  • Put needle
    • Into triangular space made by edge of femoral condyle, tibial plateau (make sure you can palpate edge of tibial plateau) and patellar tendon, 1cm medial to patellar tendon — Figure 10.83
    • Behind patella, aiming for femoral notch. Direct inward and slightly backward toward person’s thigh for 2–3cm

Figure 10.83  

Superolateral approach

  • Lie person on back with leg straight
  • Put in needle 1–2cm above (superior) and 1–2cm to outside (lateral) of upper outer aspect of patella at 45° angle, and at 45° to skin surface — Figure 10.84

Figure 10.84  

For both medial and superolateral approaches

  • If aspirating
    • Connect aspirating needle and syringe
    • Put spare hand (or have helper put their hand) on thigh above knee, press distally to milk effusion into joint. Take care to keep area sterile
    • Put in needle, pushing in slowly while aspirating until you see fluid, then aspirate
    • Don’t aspirate while needle being withdrawn through the skin. Can contaminate aspirate
  • If injecting
    • Inject skin and deeper tissues at needle insertion site with local anaesthetic
    • Use sterile needle holder/forceps (with non-dominant hand in pencil grip) to hold needle in joint, disconnect syringe, attach steroid/lidocaine (lignocaine) syringe
    • Put needle gently into centre of insertion site, push in slowly while aspirating until you see fluid or hit bone. If bone hit — pull back slightly
    • Inject
  • If aspirating and injecting
    • Do aspiration
    • Use sterile needle holder/forceps (with non-dominant hand in pencil grip) to hold needle in joint, disconnect aspiration syringe, attach steroid/lidocaine (lignocaine) syringe
    • Inject
Now
  • Take out needle, put firm pressure over site with thumb to stop any bleeding
  • Put on sticking-plaster dressing
  • If blood aspirated — put on firm bandage, arrange crutches
  • Put aspirate into specimen jar, store and transport under refrigeration
  • Check circulation and sensation

Shoulder joint injection/aspiration — lateral approach

What you do

  • Sit person comfortably on chair or couch facing you, arm hanging loosely by side, palm turned forward
  • To find site
    • Gently turn shoulder around from inside to outside to feel head of humerus
    • Find groove between head of humerus and glenoid rim
    • Needle entry site is in groove 1cm below and just lateral to coracoid process — Figure 10.85

Figure 10.85  

  • Mark site by indenting skin with tip of syringe
  • Lay out dressing pack and equipment
  • Wash hands and put on sterile gloves
  • Clean front of shoulder
  • Inject local anaesthetic into skin, if using
  • Connect syringe to needle. If injecting only — remember to start procedure with smaller needle
  • Put needle gently into shoulder at identified site. If you hit bone — pull back slightly
    • Aspirate fluid
    • Use sterile needle holder/forceps (with non-dominant hand in pencil grip) to hold needle in joint, disconnect aspiration syringe, attach steroid/lidocaine (lignocaine) syringe
    • Inject
    • Take out needle, put firm pressure over site with thumb to stop any bleeding
  • Put on sticking-plaster dressing
  • Put aspirate in specimen jar, store and transport under refrigeration
  • Check circulation and sensation

Shoulder joint — subacromial bursa injection

Attention

  • Do not inject into tendon. If needle enters tendon (gritty resistance) — pull out straight away
  • Aim to inject into soft tissue that lines non-cartilaginous surfaces (subacromial bursa)
  • If injection in right place — pain will be quickly relieved

What you need

  • Sterile dressing pack
  • Chlorhexidine 5% in 70% alcohol solution or povidone-iodine antiseptic solution
  • Local anaesthetic and equipment (if using)
  • 3mL syringe preloaded with lidocaine (lignocaine) 1% and 1mL of steroid for injection
  • Long 23G or 25G needle
  • Small sticking-plaster dressing

What you do

  • Ask person to put affected arm behind their back, with backs of fingers touching far waistline
  • Palpate acromial margin laterally or posterolaterally
    • Injection is below acromial margin, laterally, directed upward under acromion — aim for coracoid process
  • Mark injection site by indenting with end of syringe
  • Lay out dressing pack and equipment
  • Wash hands and put on sterile gloves
  • Clean site and drape with sterile towels
  • Inject local anaesthetic into skin, if using
  • Connect preloaded syringe and needle
  • Guide needle tip into site, beneath acromion, angled slightly upward and parallel to acromial under surface — Figure 10.86

Figure 10.86  

  • Inject air you have left in syringe to see if you are in joint. If no resistance felt — inject lidocaine (lignocaine) and steroid
  • Take out needle, put firm pressure over site with thumb to stop any bleeding
  • Put on sticking-plaster dressing
  • Check circulation and sensation

Steroid injection

  • Steroid injections give pain relief
  • Adding lidocaine (lignocaine) to steroid injection
    • Relieves pain at target site
    • Helps you work out if medicine has reached its target
    • Allows area to be re-examined while joint under anaesthesia
    • Helps to tell difference between local and referred pain
    • Gives volume to injection fluid
    • Distributes corticosteroid in large joints

Lidocaine (lignocaine) concentration

  • More concentrated (eg 2%) for small joints needing smaller volume
  • Less concentrated (eg 1%) for large joints needing larger volume

Attention

  • Infection after injection rare. Prevented by making sure person knows how to keep site clean
  • Post-injection flare (2–5%). Painful condition, starts 6–12 hours after injection, lasts 2–3 days. Easily confused with infection. Prevented by
    • Avoiding weight-bearing and vigorous activity with injected joint for 48 hours post-injection
    • Applying ice
    • NSAIDs — if no contraindications — Pain management (acute)
  • Steroid dose
    • Reduce dose for young people, the elderly, those in poor health
    • Be careful with short-acting steroids in people with diabetes. Risk of increased blood glucose levels for up to 3 weeks after injection

What you need

AND

  • 1mL betamethasone mixed with 3–5mL of lidocaine (lignocaine) 1%
  • OR 1mL methylprednisolone mixed with 3–5mL of lidocaine (lignocaine) 1%
  • 3mL syringe preloaded with lidocaine (lignocaine) and steroid
  • Small joints (eg wrists, ankle) — consider stronger steroids in smaller volumes

What you do

Joint fluid analysis

  • Send non-bloody fluid to pathology for cell count, gram stain, bacterial culture and if needed, special tests such as crystals, fluid-protein, fluid-glucose and fluid-LD levels
  • Do cultures on all synovial fluids. Bacterial infections can look like/be present with joint disease

Collection

  • Need a minimum of 2mL aspirate in sterile yellow container for gram stain, culture, WBC, crystals
  • For diagnosis
    • If enough fluid, put 1–2.5mL in EDTA tube (purple lid) — gives more accurate analysis of WBC. Important if delay in transport
    • If septic arthritis suspected and enough joint fluid — put 2.5mL in blood culture bottle (aseptic technique)

Transport

  • Best within 4 hours, but no later than 48 hours. Refrigerate if delay
  • Use blood culture bottle

Results

Joint fluid analysis will fall into one of 3 categories — Table 10.1

  • Non-inflammatory
    • Degenerative  (eg osteoarthritis, overuse syndrome)
    • Trauma, if no blood in fluid
  • Septic (eg infective mono-arthritis)
    • Non-gonococcal bacterial arthritis
    • Gonococcal bacterial arthritis
  • Inflammatory
    • Acute crystal arthropathy (eg gout, pseudogout)
    • Any type of arthritis

Synovial fluid findings

Table 10.1 Microscopic findings