Cases reported "Abscess"

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1/128. Cryptococcal prostatic abscess in an immunocompromised patient: a case report and review of the literature.

    A case of cryptococcal prostatic abscess in a 65-year-old Chinese man with immunosuppression from treatment of myasthenia gravis is presented. The patient was diagnosed to have cryptococcaemia when he presented with fever and urinary symptoms. Further investigations confirmed cryptococcal meningitis and imaging studies showed a hypodense lesion in the prostate. This proved to be an abscess and it was deroofed transurethrally. histology of the prostatic tissue revealed the presence of cryptococcus. The prostate can be a site of persistent cryptococcal infection and may take the form of an abscess. It should be drained transurethrally to prevent relapse.
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ranking = 1
keywords = meningitis
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2/128. Infratentorial subdural empyema, pituitary abscess, and septic cavernous sinus thrombophlebitis secondary to paranasal sinusitis: case report.

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: Infratentorial empyema, pituitary abscess, and septic cavernous sinus thrombophlebitis are all rare and potentially lethal conditions. The occurrence of all three in a single patient has not previously been described. We present such a case occurring in a young, otherwise healthy man. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 26-year-old man with a remote history of sinusitis developed rapidly progressive headache, fever, right eye pain, swelling, proptosis, and visual impairment. magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated diffuse pansinusitis, including sphenoid sinusitis, and extension of inflammation and infection into the adjacent cavernous sinuses, pituitary gland, and posterior fossa. INTERVENTION: Urgent drainage of the ethmoid and maxillary sinuses was performed; pus was not identified. The patient continued to deteriorate clinically with worsening of visual acuity. Computed tomography of the head performed the next day revealed worsening hydrocephalus and an enlarging posterior fossa subdural empyema. Urgent ventricular drainage and evacuation of the empyema was performed, and subsequently, the patient's clinical course improved. The microbiology results revealed alpha hemolytic streptococcus and coagulase-negative staphylococcus species. The patient survived but during the follow-up period had a blind right eye and pituitary insufficiency. CONCLUSION: Paranasal sinusitis can have devastating intracranial sequelae. Involvement of the adjacent pituitary gland and cavernous sinuses can result in serious neurological morbidity or mortality, and retrograde spread of infection through the basal venous system can result in subdural or parenchymal brain involvement. A high index of suspicion and aggressive medical and surgical treatment are crucial for patient survival, but the morbidity rate remains high. Our patient survived but lost anterior pituitary function and vision in his right eye.
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ranking = 7.5293784390929
keywords = streptococcus
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3/128. Group G streptococcus sacroilitis with sepsis in a 15-y-old adolescent.

    Group G streptococci cause invasive infections of different tissues. Most infected patients have underlying diseases and are of adult age. Invasive group G streptococcal infections rarely occur in childhood and adolescence. A 15-y-old boy with a beta-haemolytic group G streptococcus sacroiliitis, sepsis and secondary pulmonary manifestations resembling an acute respiratory distress syndrome is described.
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ranking = 37.646892195465
keywords = streptococcus
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4/128. nocardia asteroides pneumonia, subcutaneous abscess and meningitis in a patient with advanced malignant lymphoma: successful treatment based on in vitro antimicrobial susceptibility.

    nocardia asteroides pneumonia, subcutaneous abscess and meningitis without brain abscesses developed in a patient with advanced non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, who had received corticosteroid therapy and cancer chemotherapy for a long time. At the time of nocardial pneumonia, profound lymphocytopenia and hypogammaglobulinemia was seen. The severely immunosuppressed condition most likely accounted for the uncommon infection, nocardiosis. The organism isolated from the sputum, subcutaneous abscess and cerebrospinal fluid was strongly resistant to cotrimoxazole, which is the recommended standard treatment, but it was susceptible to imipenem (IPM) and erythromycin (EM) in an in vitro antimicrobial susceptibility study. The patient's nocardiosis responded well to chemotherapy including IPM and EM.
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ranking = 5
keywords = meningitis
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5/128. Pneumococcal abscess manifesting as an anterior mediastinal mass and fatal hemoptysis.

    An elderly man had several weeks of night sweats, weight loss, and an anterior mediastinal mass on chest radiography. Computed tomographic-guided needle aspiration was nondiagnostic. Shortly after the patient's admission, three sets of blood cultures yielded streptococcus pneumoniae. Despite systemic antimicrobials, the patient had an episode of acute hemoptysis and died. autopsy showed an anterior mediastinal abscess with pneumonic involvement of the left lung. There was histologic evidence of necrotizing pneumonia and parenchymal hemorrhage, which likely resulted in fatal hemoptysis.
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ranking = 1.4665062660005
keywords = pneumoniae
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6/128. Spinal subdural tuberculous abscess.

    OBJECTIVES: Spinal subdural abscess is rare and only 48 cases have been described to date. In this report, we present an additional spinal subdural tuberculous abscess. METHOD: Tuberculous meningitis was diagnosed with clinical and laboratory findings in a 45-year-old man. A spinal subdural abscess was demonstrated using MRI. Presence of the abscess was revealed by surgical intervention. The diagnosis was confirmed by pathological examination. RESULTS: The patient had been treated for tuberculous meningitis 2 years previously. The disease recurred when anti-tuberculous therapy was prematurely discontinued. During the second treatment, the patient also underwent a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt operation for hydrocephalus. dizziness and weakness of both legs developed after the postoperative period. Spinal MRI showed a spinal subdural abscess as a iso-intense mass with spinal cord in the T1 and T2 weighted images, ring like enhancement and compression on the spinal cord at T3-T4 level. The patient underwent surgery and the abscess was drained. CONCLUSION: tuberculosis may cause a spinal subdural abscess and although it is a rare disorder, when encountered MRI is very useful in the diagnosis.
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ranking = 2
keywords = meningitis
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7/128. A devastating ocular pathogen: beta-streptococcus Group G.

    PURPOSE: To report the clinical findings, treatment, and outcomes of four cases of beta-streptococcus Group G (BHS-G) ocular infection. methods: The medical and microbiologic records of four cases of BHS-G ocular infection were retrospectively reviewed. RESULTS: Two cases of BHS-G endophthalmitis and two cases of BHS-G keratitis were recorded. Three patients developed fulminant infection within 12 hours of the onset of symptoms. One patient's history was incomplete. One patient developed endophthalmitis from a contaminated donor button; another following cataract surgery. One developed keratitis in a keratoplasty suture tract; and another patient developed a corneal abscess after being struck with a tree branch. The patient with the contaminated donor button developed overwhelming endophthalmitis resulting in no light perception vision, severe pain, and evisceration. The postoperative cataract patient developed a purulent endophthalmitis and is still hypotonus with light perception vision. The second keratitis patient developed a significant suture abscess with marked stromal loss but eventually healed. The traumatic keratitis patient developed a large ulcer with hypopyon and descemetocele but was lost to follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first report of a series of BHS-G ocular infections. The ocular infections were characterized by rapid onset, extreme inflammation, and--despite in vitro antibiotic sensitivity--a poor or sluggish response to antibiotic therapy.
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ranking = 37.646892195465
keywords = streptococcus
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8/128. Endogenous klebsiella pneumoniae endophthalmitis associated with prostate abscess: case report.

    A young alcoholic and heavy smoker was admitted because of klebsiella pneumoniae bacteremia. The abdominal and pelvic computed tomography with enhancement revealed an abscess in the right prostate. He experienced blurred vision of his left eye on the third day during admission. Initial ocular examination revealed mild reaction in the anterior chamber and vitreous as well as multiple Roth's spots in the retina. The administration of empirical antibiotics including cefazolin and gentamicin intravenously was changed to ceftriaxone and amikacin after ophthalmologic consultation. After parenteral antibiotics for 3 weeks, the systemic condition was controlled, and the vision remained stable. During the past decades, many cases of endogenous klebsiella pneumoniae endophthalmitis associated with liver abscess were reported in taiwan. However, documented reports of this condition associated with a prostate abscess are rare. This case, classified as posterior focal endogenous endophthalmitis, had good prognosis under appropriate antibiotic treatment. early diagnosis and prompt therapy are important for control of sepsis and restoration of vision.
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ranking = 8.799037596003
keywords = pneumoniae
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9/128. peptostreptococcus asaccharolyticus renal abscess: a rare cause of fever of unknown origin.

    Renal abscess is uncommon in pediatrics and is rarely a cause of fever of unknown origin. We recently cared for a patient who presented with a 3-week history of fever. An indium scan ultimately led to the diagnosis of a renal abscess. Aspiration yielded peptostreptococcus asaccharolyticus. This unusual case prompted a review of the clinical and microbiologic features of renal abscess in pediatric patients at our hospital over the past 10 years. Seven additional patients with a discharge diagnosis of renal abscess were identified. Only 2 of the patients had identifiable risk factors (diabetes mellitus and polycystic kidneys). staphylococcus aureus or enterobacteriaceae were responsible for most infections, consistent with hematogenous and urinary tract sources, respectively. No other cases of anaerobic abscess were identified. This case highlights the importance of considering a renal abscess in the differential diagnosis of fever of unknown origin and of processing specimens for both aerobic and anaerobic organisms.
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ranking = 37.646892195465
keywords = streptococcus
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10/128. The changing face of AIDS-related opportunism: cryptococcosis in the highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) era. case reports and literature review.

    Only nine cases of AIDS-related cryptococcosis have been reported until now in patients receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), all of them with abnormal clinical features. Two hiv-infected patients who experienced an atypical relapse of cryptococcosis shortly after the start of HAART and despite maintenance antifungal treatment, are described. Six different relapses of cryptococcal meningitis were observed in a 28-month period in a patient who obtained a poor immune recovery after HAART (as shown by a CD4 lymphocyte count ranging from 78 to 149 cells/microL, opposed to a baseline level of 98 cells/microL). On the other hand, a patient with favorable immunological response to HAART (as expressed by a CD4 count growing from 7 to 186 cells/microL), experienced isolated multiple indolent cryptococcal abscesses involving head, neck, the anterior thoracic wall, and regional lymph nodes, with repeatedly negative cultures, and diagnosis obtained by both histopathologic study and positive serum antigen assay. Both our case reports are representative of novel correlations between opportunistic pathogens and immune reactivity, descending from the introduction of HAART. The first episode describes an exceedingly elevated number of disease relapses despite HAART and antifungal maintenance treatment, which may descend from an incomplete immune response to antiretroviral therapy, possibly responsible for failure in obtaining eradication of yeasts, but also for lack of disease dissemination (usually leading to a lethal multivisceral involvement in the pre-HAART era). The abnormal disease course and localization of second reported patient well depicts an "immune reconstitution syndrome" probably representing a flare-up of a latent fungal infection, caused by a rapidly effective HAART. In patients treated with HAART, AIDS-related cryptococcosis cannot therefore be ruled out by the absence of neurological involvement, and by persistingly negative cultures.
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ranking = 1
keywords = meningitis
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