• Resuscitation · Aug 2003

    Case Reports

    Gas gangrene pyaemia with myocardial abscess formation--fatal outcome from a rare infection nowadays.

    • Michael Keese, Thomas Nichterlein, Matthias Hahn, Richard Magdeburg, Mevlut Karaorman, Walter Back, Jörg Sturm, and Heinz Kerger.
    • Department of Surgery, University Hospital of Mannheim, 68135 Mannheim, Germany. michael.keese@chir.ma.uni-heidelberg.de
    • Resuscitation. 2003 Aug 1; 58 (2): 219-25.

    AbstractWe report a case of sudden death after gas gangrene. A 67-year-old male patient with diabetes mellitus and chronic renal failure (on haemodialysis three times a week) presented in the surgical emergency department with a severe swelling and crepitation in the right groin. No signs of trauma were present-except for a well-healed, 1-year-old scar after femoro-popliteal bypass surgery. Two days earlier, he had presented to the internal medicine department with epigastric pain and had left against medical advice. On readmission the patient was initially conscious and in a stable cardiopulmonary condition but developed sudden cardiocirculatory failure and underwent resuscitation. Despite all resuscitation measures, including the administration of high doses of catecholamines and the treatment of hyperkalemia, the patient died. Autopsy revealed septicaemia with rod-shaped gram-positive bacteria, typical of Clostridium perfringens, evidenced by multiple areas of myonecrosis. Abscess formation was found in the myocardium. Clostridial gas gangrene is a rare clinical condition. Unless immediate diagnosis and adequate therapy measures are taken, the outcome and chances for survival are poor as demonstrated by this case.

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