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Dr. Neelabh • Orthopedic Surgeon

Osteomyelitis and Infected Nonunion in Delhi

Osteomyelitis and Infected Nonunion in Delhi requires a systematic, staged approach: aggressive debridement, deep cultures and targeted antibiotics, stable fixation, and biologic reconstruction to eradicate infection and heal bone. Dr. Neelabh’s protocol prioritises soft‑tissue safety, dead‑space management, local antibiotic delivery, and a clear plan for union and function. We do not provide in‑house physiotherapy; we share written protocols and coordinate with your physiotherapist for phased recovery.

Debridement • Local antibiotics • Stable reconstruction • Close follow‑up

Osteomyelitis and Infected Nonunion in Delhi - staged debridement and reconstruction
Infection control + bone healing

About Osteomyelitis & Infected Nonunion

Osteomyelitis is bone infection—sometimes following open fractures, prior surgery, or bloodstream spread. Infected nonunion occurs when a fracture fails to heal and becomes infected, often due to instability, dead bone, or contamination. These conditions demand more than antibiotics alone. They require careful staging: remove infected/necrotic tissue, deliver high local antibiotic concentrations, restore stability, and re‑establish bone biology.

Our approach is evidence‑based and pragmatic. We confirm the diagnosis, identify the organism(s), and build a plan that balances infection eradication with timely reconstruction—so you can heal and return to function with lower chance of recurrence.

X-ray changes in chronic osteomyelitis and infected nonunion in Delhi
Don’t ignore warning signs

Signs, Symptoms & When to Seek Care

Local symptoms

Persistent or recurrent pain, swelling, warmth, redness, draining sinus, or wound that won’t close.

Systemic features

Fever/chills (often absent in chronic cases), fatigue, or high inflammatory markers.

Nonunion clues

Pain with weight‑bearing months after fracture, implant failure, deformity, or abnormal motion at the fracture site.

Red flags: new severe pain, high fever, spreading redness, uncontrolled diabetes, or signs of sepsis—seek urgent assessment.

Get the diagnosis right

Diagnosis & Microbiology

  • Lab markers: ESR/CRP trends; WBC can be normal in chronic cases.
  • Imaging: X‑rays for hardware/union status; CT for bone detail; MRI with contrast for marrow/soft‑tissue tracts; nuclear scans selectively.
  • Deep cultures: Multiple intra‑operative tissue samples from representative zones—avoid surface swabs.
  • Pathology & histology: Confirms necrotic bone (sequestrum) and active infection.

We plan surgery to obtain accurate samples before starting or changing antibiotics, unless you are septic and need immediate coverage.

Intra-operative debridement and deep tissue culture sampling in Delhi
Four pillars

Principles of Management

1) Debridement

Remove all infected/necrotic bone and soft tissue; open and clean sinus tracts; excise the biofilm interface.

2) Dead space control

Fill with antibiotic‑loaded carriers (cement beads/spacers) or biologic options to prevent fluid pockets and support local antibiotic levels.

3) Stability

Infected bone will not heal without stability: external fixator, exchange nailing, or staged plating depending on pattern and soft tissue.

4) Soft‑tissue coverage

Achieve robust skin/muscle coverage; involve plastic surgery when needed for flaps/grafts.

Stage 1: Infection control

Stage 1: Debridement, Dead Space & Local Antibiotics

Stage 1 removes infection sources, obtains cultures, and delivers high local antibiotics. Where implants are loose or surrounded by pus/biofilm, they’re removed. Stable, well‑integrated hardware may be retained in select acute cases, but chronic or loose constructs are generally exchanged or removed.

  • Debridement: Systematic removal of sequestrum, fibrous tissue, pus; lavage with ample sterile solution.
  • Local antibiotics: Vancomycin/gentamicin‑loaded PMMA beads/spacers or resorbable carriers achieve high site concentrations.
  • Induced membrane (Masquelet): Cement spacer creates a biologically active membrane for Stage‑2 bone grafting.
  • Temporary stability: External fixator, spanning frames, or provisional constructs to maintain alignment.

We send multiple tissue cultures; final antibiotic choices depend on organism/susceptibility and ID guidance.

Antibiotic-loaded beads and spacers for osteomyelitis in Delhi
Skin & muscle matter

Soft‑Tissue Coverage & Skin Integrity

Healing rests on healthy coverage. We aim for primary closure when possible; if not, we coordinate flaps with plastic surgery. Negative‑pressure wound therapy may bridge to definitive closure. Pin‑site care and dressing protocols are taught to you and your caregiver to reduce infection risk.

  • Coverage plan: Local/regional flaps as needed; timing coordinated with infection control.
  • Pin‑site care: Daily cleaning; early management of irritation; avoid crust buildup.
  • Nutrition: Protein‑rich diet supports soft‑tissue and bone healing.
Soft-tissue coverage strategies and pin-site care in Delhi
Stage 2: Build bone, restore stability

Stage 2: Reconstruction & Stability

Once infection is controlled (clinical improvement, down‑trending ESR/CRP, healthy soft tissues), we reconstruct bone and restore durable stability. Options depend on the problem:

Exchange nailing

For infected nonunion of femur/tibia shafts—removal of prior nail, reaming (debridement), and larger‑diameter new nail with interlocking; often combined with local antibiotics.

Plates & bone grafts

For peri‑articular or metaphyseal defects; anatomic reduction and stability with autograft/allograft or bone substitutes as needed.

Masquelet (induced membrane)

Stage‑1 spacer induces a vascular membrane; Stage‑2 opens the membrane and packs bone graft to fill defects.

Bone transport (Ilizarov/Hexapod/RAIL)

For large segmental defects or infected nonunion with bone loss—gradual transport rebuilds continuity and alignment.

Masquelet induced membrane technique for bone defects in Delhi
Targeted therapy

Systemic Antibiotics & ID Coordination

Local antibiotics are powerful, but systemic therapy guided by culture/susceptibility and an infectious disease (ID) specialist remains essential. Typical courses are 4–6 weeks for chronic osteomyelitis (IV and/or highly bioavailable oral agents), adjusted to organism and surgical progress. We track labs, monitor for side effects, and adapt therapy as wounds and markers improve.

  • Culture‑directed: Avoid unnecessary broad coverage once results are back.
  • Biofilm considerations: Some agents penetrate biofilms better; we align antibiotic choice with implant strategy.
  • Monitoring: CBC, renal/hepatic function, inflammatory markers; adverse‑effect vigilance.
CRP/ESR trend monitoring for osteomyelitis treatment in Delhi
Comfort with control

Anesthesia & Pain Strategy

We use multimodal, opioid‑sparing pain management. Regional nerve blocks reduce immediate post‑op pain. Scheduled paracetamol and anti‑inflammatories (where appropriate) form the base; short‑course opioids are reserved for breakthrough pain. Sleep hygiene and simple routines reduce discomfort and improve recovery.

  • Regional anesthesia: Femoral/sciatic/brachial blocks as indicated.
  • Simple dosing schedules: Stay ahead of pain; avoid over‑sedation.
  • Delirium awareness: Especially for older adults; keep hydration and orientation.
Multimodal pain control after debridement and reconstruction in Delhi
Phased, coordinated recovery

Rehabilitation & Weight‑Bearing

We provide a written, phase‑based plan and coordinate with your physiotherapist; we do not provide in‑house physiotherapy. Early goals: swelling control, safe transfers, and protected mobility. As stability improves, we progress range‑of‑motion, strengthening, and gait. Weight‑bearing advances based on fixation stability, bone quality, and X‑ray evidence of healing.

  • Week 0–2: Elevation, wound care, pin‑site care, isometrics, safe partial weight‑bearing if allowed.
  • Week 3–6: Increase ROM and strength; staged weight‑bearing per plan; brace/frame care.
  • Week 6–12: Progressive strengthening and endurance; device wean when safe; balance training.
  • Month 3–6+: Functional training; return to work/activities based on healing and strength.
Rehabilitation and walking aids after infected nonunion surgery in Delhi
Set expectations early

Risks, Outcomes & Limb Salvage

Potential benefits

Infection control, stable union, restored alignment and function, limb salvage, and pain reduction.

Possible risks

Re‑infection, nonunion/malunion, joint stiffness, nerve irritation, hardware issues, DVT/PE, wound problems.

Success factors

Thorough debridement, stable fixation, organism‑matched antibiotics, soft‑tissue coverage, smoking cessation, and protocol adherence.

While limb salvage is feasible in many cases, we discuss realistic outcomes and, rarely, situations where amputation may offer faster recovery or better function.

Coverage

Cost & Insurance

Costs depend on staging (one vs two‑stage), implant strategy (spacers, external fixators, nails/plates), hospital stay, plastic surgery involvement, and antibiotic duration. Most insurers cover medically necessary debridement and reconstruction. We verify benefits and provide a transparent estimate before scheduling your Osteomyelitis and Infected Nonunion in Delhi treatment.

  • Insurance pre‑authorization & benefits check
  • Clear estimate of out‑of‑pocket costs
  • Cashless/financing options where applicable
Cost and insurance guidance for osteomyelitis and infected nonunion in Delhi
Before surgery

How to Prepare

Medical optimization

Control diabetes and blood pressure; stop smoking (critical for union); review anticoagulants with your physician.

Records & imaging

Bring prior operative notes, cultures, antibiotic history, and all imaging; we’ll order targeted studies if needed.

Home setup

Clear walking paths, ensure good lighting, add bathroom safety, and plan caregiver support for dressing and pin‑site care.

Physio coordination

We do not provide in‑house physiotherapy; share your physiotherapist’s contact so we can align written protocols.

Nutrition & sleep

Protein‑rich diet (1–1.2 g/kg/day if permissible), vitamin D/calcium where indicated, and regular sleep to support healing.

Clinics & Timings

Where to Consult Dr. Neelabh

Kapoor Medical Centre

E-18, Naraina, New Delhi-110028
🕓 10:00 AM – 2:30 PM

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Jeewan Hospital

2-B, Pusa Road, New Delhi-110005
🕓 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM

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BLK Hospital

A-4-6, Pusa Rd, Near Rajendra Place Metro Station, New Delhi-110005
🕓 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM

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Clinic Intermed

38/16, East Patel Nagar, New Delhi-110008
🕓 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM

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Timings may vary—please call +91‑9810117204 to confirm.

Your questions answered

FAQs

Why not treat osteomyelitis with antibiotics alone?
Antibiotics cannot penetrate dead bone or biofilm reliably. Debridement removes the nidus; antibiotics then clear residual infection.
How long will I be on antibiotics?
Commonly 4–6 weeks, tailored to organisms and surgery. Some cases require longer courses or step‑down to oral agents.
Will all hardware be removed?
Loose or contaminated implants are removed; stable implants may be retained in select acute cases. Chronic infections typically need exchange or removal.
What if bone is missing?
We reconstruct with Masquelet induced membrane, bone grafts, or bone transport using Ilizarov/Hexapod/RAIL depending on defect size and location.
Do you provide physiotherapy?
We do not provide in‑house physiotherapy. We supply written protocols and coordinate with your physiotherapist; referrals to external clinics are available if needed.
Next step

Need a staged plan for Osteomyelitis and Infected Nonunion in Delhi?

Book a consultation. We’ll confirm the diagnosis, plan cultures and debridement, and map a safe path to infection control and union.