Introduction: Hepat abscess can be defined as an encapsulated collection of suppurative material within the liver parenchyma. Hepatic abscess can be distinguished as pyogenic, amebic or fungal. Biliary tract disease remains the most common cause of hepatic abscess today and the most common complications range from pleural effusion, empyema and broncohepatic fistula to subphrenic abscess and rupture into the peritoneal cavity, stomach, colon, vena cava or kidney. A large abscess compressing the inferior vena cava and the hepatic veins may result in Budd-Chiari syndrome. In this report, we present a rare case of hepatic abscess with an unusual evolution that was treated with a noninvasive approach. Case presentation: A 79-years-old Caucasian woman underwent endoscopic bile stone extraction and laparoscopic colecystectomy. Six months later, a hepatic abscess in association with bilateral effusion was diagnosed. The prompt imaging-guided drainage solved the case. Three years later, she came to our attention complaining of dull, diffuse abdominal pain and high body temperature (38°C). A retroperitoneal abscess was diagnosed that was spreading to the right lateral wall of the abdomen and extending across the muscular wall to the subcutaneous layer. The fluid collection also involved the right pleural cavity, forming an empyema. Also in this case, an imaging-guided drainage was performed, and the patient's clinical picture resolved in a few days. The retroperitoneal abscess recurred 14 months later, and it was dealt with using the same treatment. Three months from the last follow-up, the patient came back to our attention with an evident swelling of her right lumbar region. Computed tomography revealed a right inferior lumbar hernia comprising adipose tissue and the right kidney. A surgical intervention was recommended to the patient, but, owing to her poor general healt, she refused any invasive approach. Conclusions: retroperitoneal abscess is an uncommon complication of biliary tract surgery and represent a potential cause of death, especially in those patients with multiple diseases. prompt drainage is crucial to the treatment. Failure in eliminating the primary infective focus could bring complications and, in general, a weakness of lumbar muscular wall, even resulting in a rare case of lumbar hernia.
Palumbo, V.D., Di Trapani, B., Bruno, A., Feo, M., Molinelli, B., Tomasini, S., et al. (2019). RECURRENT RETROPERITONEAL ABSCESS AFTER BILIARY TRACT SURGERY IN AN ELEDERLY PATIENT: A MINIMALLY INVASIVE NONSURGICAL APPROIACH AND ITS CONSEQUENCES: A CASE REPORT. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL CASE REPORTS [10.1186/s13256-019-1973-3].
RECURRENT RETROPERITONEAL ABSCESS AFTER BILIARY TRACT SURGERY IN AN ELEDERLY PATIENT: A MINIMALLY INVASIVE NONSURGICAL APPROIACH AND ITS CONSEQUENCES: A CASE REPORT
Palumbo,VD
;Di Trapani,B;Tomasini,S;Lo Monte,AI;Tomasello,GMethodology
2019-01-01
Abstract
Introduction: Hepat abscess can be defined as an encapsulated collection of suppurative material within the liver parenchyma. Hepatic abscess can be distinguished as pyogenic, amebic or fungal. Biliary tract disease remains the most common cause of hepatic abscess today and the most common complications range from pleural effusion, empyema and broncohepatic fistula to subphrenic abscess and rupture into the peritoneal cavity, stomach, colon, vena cava or kidney. A large abscess compressing the inferior vena cava and the hepatic veins may result in Budd-Chiari syndrome. In this report, we present a rare case of hepatic abscess with an unusual evolution that was treated with a noninvasive approach. Case presentation: A 79-years-old Caucasian woman underwent endoscopic bile stone extraction and laparoscopic colecystectomy. Six months later, a hepatic abscess in association with bilateral effusion was diagnosed. The prompt imaging-guided drainage solved the case. Three years later, she came to our attention complaining of dull, diffuse abdominal pain and high body temperature (38°C). A retroperitoneal abscess was diagnosed that was spreading to the right lateral wall of the abdomen and extending across the muscular wall to the subcutaneous layer. The fluid collection also involved the right pleural cavity, forming an empyema. Also in this case, an imaging-guided drainage was performed, and the patient's clinical picture resolved in a few days. The retroperitoneal abscess recurred 14 months later, and it was dealt with using the same treatment. Three months from the last follow-up, the patient came back to our attention with an evident swelling of her right lumbar region. Computed tomography revealed a right inferior lumbar hernia comprising adipose tissue and the right kidney. A surgical intervention was recommended to the patient, but, owing to her poor general healt, she refused any invasive approach. Conclusions: retroperitoneal abscess is an uncommon complication of biliary tract surgery and represent a potential cause of death, especially in those patients with multiple diseases. prompt drainage is crucial to the treatment. Failure in eliminating the primary infective focus could bring complications and, in general, a weakness of lumbar muscular wall, even resulting in a rare case of lumbar hernia.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
RECURRENT RETROPERITONEAL ABSCESS AFTER BILIARY TRACT SURGERY... JOURNAL OF MEDICAL CASE REPORTS 2019.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipologia:
Versione Editoriale
Dimensione
2.06 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
2.06 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.