MED - Artigos
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing MED - Artigos by Subject "Abscess"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Celulite no Local de Injeção do Agonista de GLP-1: Rara, Mas RelevantePublication . Simões, PB; Mateus, S; Brazão, H; Salvado, CWe present a case of cellulitis complicating with abscess formation as a possible complication of treatment with injectable GLP-1 agonists on a sixty-one-year-old woman. Pus cultures showed isolation of Streptococcus anginosus and clindamycin was started as targeted therapy but absence of improvement prompted a consultation with the surgery department and a manual surgical debridement was performed. A second isolate of Eikenella corrodens, which is frequently resistant to clindamycin, was identified. We opted for a switch to ceftriaxone and after nineteen days, having achieved clinical improvement, plans were made for her to continue to change her wound dressing at her local health center and for a short-term revaluation at a surgery outpatient consultation. Caring for social needs and assuring continuity across multiple care levels can be fundamental in preventing adverse effects from self-injectable drugs.
- Multifocal Septic Arthritis, Gluteal Abscess and Spondylodiscitis by Streptococcus Dysgalactiae Subspecies Equisimilis After an Intramuscular InjectionPublication . Pocinho, R; Antunes, L; Pires, P; Baptista, IWe present the case of a 63-year-old man, admitted for hand cellulitis and acute kidney injury. A Streptococcus dysgalactiae subsp equisimilis (SDSE) was isolated in blood cultures and despite directed intravenous antibiotherapy, the patient evolved unfavourably, with dorsolumbar spondylodiscitis, multifocal septic arthritis and abscesses. CT also showed densification of the gluteal muscles, multiple air bubbles in the psoas, paraspinal muscles and spinal canal that were associated with an intramuscular injection administered 1 week earlier for a backache. After escalation of the antibiotherapy and intensive supportive measures, the patient showed improvement and was discharged after 8 weeks of antibiotherapy.The incidence of invasive SDSE infections has been growing, especially in immunosupressed patients. In this case, despite no predisposing factor identified, it evolved to severe sepsis. The intramuscular injection, a trivialised but not harmless procedure, was the assumed port of entry, as previously described in another case report.