1.M. chelonae Soft Tissue Infection Spreading to Osteomyelitis.
Ryuh Sup KIM ; Jun Sik KIM ; Dong Hoon CHOI ; Do Seung KWON ; Jae Hoon JUNG
Yonsei Medical Journal 2004;45(1):169-173
A previously healthy, 54-year-old woman presented with Mycobacterium chelonae soft tissue infection and osteomyelitis of her left lower leg. The infection had started from soft tissue emerging at the medial aspect of the distal femur and had spread through the bone because of delayed diagnosis. The largely indolent, 8-month course to diagnosis was attributable to unremarkable clinical manifestations combined with a low index of suspicion such as immunocompetent patient and/or inadequate finding of acid-fast bacilli in a lesion smear, characteristic histopathological features, and culture techniques. Soft tissue infection and osteomyelitis were successfully treated without surgical intervention and with a 6-month course of chemotherapy.
Female
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Human
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Knee Joint/microbiology/radiography
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Middle Aged
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Mycobacterium Infections, Atypical/complications/*radiography
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*Mycobacterium chelonae
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Osteomyelitis/*microbiology/radiography
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Soft Tissue Infections/*microbiology/radiography
2.Nocardia osteomyelitis in a pachymeningitis patient: an example of a difficult case to treat with antimicrobial agents.
Kyoo Ho SHIN ; Woo Suk LEE ; Young Ki SON ; Kyungwon LEE ; Yunsop CHONG
Yonsei Medical Journal 1998;39(6):604-610
Antimicrobial agents played a miraculous role in the treatment of bacterial infections until resistant bacteria became widespread. Besides antimicrobial-resistant bacteria, many factors can influence the cure of infection. Nocardia infection may be a good example which is difficult to cure with antimicrobial agents alone. A 66-year-old man developed soft tissue infection of the right buttock and thigh. He was given prednisolone and azathioprine for pachymeningitis 3 months prior to admission. Despite surgical and antimicrobial treatment (sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim), the infection spread to the femur and osteomyelitis developed. The case showed that treatment of bacterial infection is not always as successful as was once thought because recent isolates of bacteria are more often resistant to various antimicrobial agents, intracellular parasites are difficult to eliminate even with the active drug in vitro, and infections in some sites such as bone are refractory to treatment especially when the patient is in a compromised state. In conclusion, for the treatment of infections, clinicians need to rely on laboratory tests more than before and have to consider the influence of various host factors.
Aged
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Case Report
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Drug Resistance, Microbial/physiology
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Dura Mater/microbiology*
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Fatal Outcome
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Femur/radiography
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Human
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Male
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Meningitis/microbiology*
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Nocardia Infections/physiopathology
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Nocardia Infections/drug therapy*
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Osteomyelitis/radionuclide imaging
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Osteomyelitis/radiography
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Osteomyelitis/microbiology*
3.A Case of Atypical Skull Base Osteomyelitis with Septic Pulmonary Embolism.
Soon Jung LEE ; Young Cheol WEON ; Hee Jeong CHA ; Sun Young KIM ; Kwang Won SEO ; Yangjin JEGAL ; Jong Joon AHN ; Seung Won RA
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2011;26(7):962-965
Skull base osteomyelitis (SBO) is difficult to diagnose when a patient presents with multiple cranial nerve palsies but no obvious infectious focus. There is no report about SBO with septic pulmonary embolism. A 51-yr-old man presented to our hospital with headache, hoarseness, dysphagia, frequent choking, fever, cough, and sputum production. He was diagnosed of having masked mastoiditis complicated by SBO with multiple cranial nerve palsies, sigmoid sinus thrombosis, and septic pulmonary embolism. We successfully treated him with antibiotics and anticoagulants alone, with no surgical intervention. His neurologic deficits were completely recovered. Decrease of pulmonary nodules and thrombus in the sinus was evident on the follow-up imaging one month later. In selected cases of intracranial complications of SBO and septic pulmonary embolism, secondary to mastoiditis with early response to antibiotic therapy, conservative treatment may be considered and surgical intervention may be withheld.
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use
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Anticoagulants/therapeutic use
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C-Reactive Protein/analysis
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Cranial Nerve Diseases/complications/diagnosis
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Enterobacter aerogenes/isolation & purification
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Enterobacteriaceae Infections/diagnosis/drug therapy
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Humans
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Lung/pathology/radiography
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Male
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Mastoiditis/complications/diagnosis
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Middle Aged
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Osteomyelitis/complications/*diagnosis/drug therapy
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Pulmonary Embolism/complications/*diagnosis/microbiology
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Sinus Thrombosis, Intracranial/complications/diagnosis
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Skull Base
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Sputum/microbiology
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed