| Literature DB >> 21747861 |
Eric Mao1, Aine Clements, Edward Feller.
Abstract
An association exists between colon carcinoma and Clostridium septicum infection, especially bacteremia. We reviewed retrospectively all positive blood cultures for this organism at a 300-bed general hospital over 4 years. Four of 15 cases were associated with concurrent colon carcinoma. C. septicum infection was the presenting feature of previously undiagnosed large bowel malignancy in three patients. We report this small case series to alert clinicians to the diverse spectrum and diagnostic difficulties of this rare, potentially catastrophic association. Although commonly associated with necrotizing skin or soft tissue infections, this bacterium can present with nonspecific or atypical symptoms. All patients with positive blood cultures for C. septicum, even without clinical suspicion of large bowel malignancy, should undergo colonoscopy to evaluate for colon carcinoma.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21747861 PMCID: PMC3124225 DOI: 10.1155/2011/248453
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Cases of C. septicum infection.
| Age | Gender | Hx of colon CA | Clinical presentation | Evaluation | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 81 | Male | Resected proximal colon CA | 2 days of fever | CT: liver metastases | Palliative care |
| 87 | Female | None | Steady, mild RLQ pain for 1 week and fever for 1 day | CT: cecal mass, liver metastases Colonoscopy: carcinoma | Palliative care |
| 73 | Male | None | Fever for 1 day, weakness unsteady gait | CT: thickened ascending colon wall; periaortic gas (aortitis) | In-hospital death |
| 76 | Male | None | Fever with diffuse lower abdominal pain | CT: cecal mass | Surgical resection |
Clinical spectrum of C. septicum.
| Cellulitis | Septic Arthritis |
| Fasciitis | Septic shock |
| Myonecrosis (gas gangrene) | Abdominal pain |
| Abscess (visceral or soft tissue) | Fever, malaise |
| Aortitis | Hemolysis |
| Aortic aneurysm (ruptured or unruptured) |