Cervical anaerobic vertebral osteomyelitis following surgical tracheotomy: A case report

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Abstract

Background: We report a rare case of anaerobic vertebral osteomyelitis associated with surgical tracheotomy which has never been reported to the best of our knowledge. Case presentation: A healthy 39-year-old man was admitted to intensive care for a severe brain trauma injury where a surgical tracheotomy was performed. He was discharged to a rehabilitation centre after 54 days hospital stay. During rehabilitation, he developed progressive and febrile tetraplegia associated with cervical pain, requiring an intensive care readmission. A polymicrobial anaerobic bloodstream infection was revealed and magnetic resonance imaging diagnosed cervical vertebral osteomyelitis. Both the type of anaerobic micro-organisms found and the timing of the symptoms strongly suggest that the surgical tracheotomy was responsible for this rare case of cervical vertebral osteomyelitis. The patient was successfully treated by a prolonged antimicrobial therapy and by surgical laminectomy. Conclusions: Tracheotomy may generate anaerobic bacteraemia and related osteomyelitis in the specific setting of severe trauma patients. Clinicians should consider anaerobic vertebral osteomyelitis when they are confronted with a febrile tetraplegia after tracheotomy.

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APA

Larcher, R., Maury, C., Charbit, J., Jean-Pierre, H., Le Moing, V., Klouche, K., & Capdevila, X. (2019). Cervical anaerobic vertebral osteomyelitis following surgical tracheotomy: A case report. BMC Infectious Diseases, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-4291-x

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