| Literature DB >> 27015841 |
Yoshihito Tanaka1, Hisaaki Kato2, Kunihiro Shirai2, Yasuhiro Nakajima2, Noriaki Yamada2, Hideshi Okada2, Takahiro Yoshida2, Izumi Toyoda2, Shinji Ogura2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Septic arthritis of the sternoclavicular joint is rare. It can be associated with serious complications such as osteomyelitis, chest wall abscess, and mediastinitis. In this report, we describe a case of an otherwise healthy adult with septic arthritis of the sternoclavicular joint with chest wall abscess. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Chest wall abscess; Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO2); Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT); Sepsis; Sternoclavicular joint septic arthritis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27015841 PMCID: PMC4808294 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-016-0856-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Fig. 1Chest findings on admission. Redness and swelling of skin localizing to the sternoclavicular joint are shown
Laboratory data on admission
| Laboratory parameters | Test results |
|---|---|
| TP | 4.2 g/dl |
| Alb | 2.2 g/dl |
| CPK | 127 IU/L |
| AST | 45 IU/L |
| ALT | 28 IU/L |
| LDH | 239 IU/L |
| ALP | 538 IU/L |
| γ-GTP | 81 IU/L |
| Amy | 16 IU/L |
| Cre | 0.80 mg/dl |
| BUN | 15.7 mg/dl |
| TG | 122 mg/dl |
| T-Chol | 85 mg/dl |
| T-Bil | 2.9 mg/dl |
| D-Bil | 1.7 mg/dl |
| Na+ | 139 mEq/L |
| K+ | 3.2 mEq/L |
| Cl− | 103 mEq/L |
| Mg | 1.9 mg/dl |
| Ca2+ | 7.1 mg/dl |
| IP | 3.1 mg/dl |
| CRP | 17.5 mg/dl |
| HbA1c | 5.7 % |
| Arterial blood gas | |
| FiO2 | 0.6 |
| pH | 7.51 |
| pCO2 | 33.0 mmHg |
| pO2 | 116.0 mmHg |
| BE | 3.2 mmol/L |
| Lactate | 7 mg/dl |
| WBC | 14,060/μl |
| RBC | 356 × 104/μl |
| Hb | 11.0 g/dl |
| Hct | 31.9 % |
| Plt | 14.6 × 104/μl |
| PT | 15.0 seconds |
| aPTT | 33.5 seconds |
| Fibrinogen | 683 mg/dl |
| FDP | 14.2 μg/dl |
|
| 7.2 μg/dl |
| AT-III | 49 % |
| Antinuclear antibody | Negative |
| Rheumatoid factor | Negative |
Alb albumin, ALP alkaline phosphatase, ALT alanine aminotransferase, Amy amylase, aPTT activated partial thromboplastin time, AST aspartate aminotransferase, AT-III antithrombin III, BE base excess, BUN blood urea nitrogen, Ca calcium, Cl chloride, CPK creatine phosphokinase, Cre creatinine, CRP C-reactive protein, D-Bil direct bilirubin, FDP fibrin degradation products, FiO fraction of inspired oxygen, γ-GTP γ-glutamyl transferase, Hb hemoglobin, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c, Hct hematocrit, IP inorganic phosphorus, K potassium, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, Mg magnesium, Na sodium, pCO partial pressure of carbon dioxide, Plt platelets, pO partial pressure of oxygen, PT prothrombin time, RBC red blood cells, T-Bil total bilirubin, T-Chol total cholesterol, TG triglycerides, TP total protein, WBC white blood cells
Fig. 2Computed tomographic scans of the chest on admission. Computed tomography of the chest detected an abscess with air located below the thyroid gland and involving the right pectoral major muscle around the right sternoclavicular joint (a, b), as well as disaggregation of the right sternoclavicular joint (b)
Fig. 3Wound-related findings. Operative findings on the day of admission (a, b) were necrotizing tissue around the sternoclavicular joint and the joint destruction (white arrow). When we debrided residual necrotizing tissue on postoperative day 10, the sternoclavicular joint was still exposed (black arrow) (c). We introduced negative pressure wound therapy on postoperative day 11 (d). On postoperative day 37, good granulation was observed (e)
Fig. 4Clinical course. WBC white blood cells, CRP C-reactive protein, BT body temperature, CEZ cefazolin, CLDM clindamycin, GM gentamicin, ABPC/SBT ampicillin/sulbactam, NPWT negative pressure wound therapy, HBO hyperbaric oxygen therapy