Literature DB >> 19721175

[Emphysematous cystitis: case report].

Daniel Pérez Fentes1, Miguel Blanco Parra, José Lema Grille, Valentín Toucedo Caamaño, Serafín Novás Castro, Pedro Lamas Cedrón, Manuel Villar Núñez.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To report one case of emphysematous cystitis and to review its diagnosis and treatment in the related literature.
METHOD: We report the case of a type II diabetic 91-year-old woman with jaundice, hematuria, vomits, abdominal pain and poor glycemia control. Diagnosis was obtained by plain abdominal X-ray and ultrasonography, and confirmed by CT. E.coli was isolated in urinary culture.
RESULTS: Antibiotic intravenous therapy with piperacillin-tazo-bactam, urinary bladder catheterization and strict glycemia control. The patient was discharged from hospital on day 5, with 14 additional days of orally administered amoxicillin-clavulanic and bladder catheterization. Complete clinical, radiologic and microbiologic resolution was achieved.
CONCLUSIONS: Emphysematous cystitis is a rare entity, most common in diabetic women, which results from infection of the urinary bladder with gas-producing pathogens, mainly E.coli. Clinical presentation is variable. Emphysematous cystitis can be diagnosed radiologically, mainly with CT scan. The management consists of broad-spectrum antibiotics, strict glycemic control and bladder drainage. Emphysematous cystitis usually has a benign course, but complications may arise in up to 10-20% of cases, requiring surgical treatment.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19721175

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Esp Urol        ISSN: 0004-0614            Impact factor:   0.436


  1 in total

1.  Sepsis-associated purpura fulminans caused by emphysematous cystitis.

Authors:  Kyotaro Fukuta; Keito Shiozaki; Ryoichi Nakanishi; Tohru Inai; Hirofumi Izaki; Rie Yamamura; Emiko Nakataki; Eiji Kudo; Kazuya Kanda
Journal:  IJU Case Rep       Date:  2021-08-23
  1 in total

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