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1/4. Extracolonic manifestations of clostridium difficile infections. Presentation of 2 cases and review of the literature.

    clostridium difficile is most commonly associated with colonic infection. It may, however, also cause disease in a variety of other organ systems. Small bowel involvement is often associated with previous surgical procedures on the small intestine and is associated with a significant mortality rate (4 of 7 patients). When associated with bacteremia, the infection is, as expected, frequently polymicrobial in association with usual colonic flora. The mortality rate among patients with C. difficile bacteremia is 2 of 10 reported patients. Visceral abscess formation involves mainly the spleen, with 1 reported case of pancreatic abscess formation. Frequently these abscesses are only recognized weeks to months after the onset of diarrhea or other colonic symptoms. C. difficile-related reactive arthritis is frequently polyarticular in nature and is not related to the patient's underlying HLA-B27 status. fever is not universally present. The most commonly involved joints are the knee and wrist (involved in 18 of 36 cases). Reactive arthritis begins an average of 11.3 days after the onset of diarrhea and is a prolonged illness, taking an average of 68 days to resolve. Other entities, such as cellulitis, necrotizing fasciitis, osteomyelitis, and prosthetic device infections, can also occur. Localized skin and bone infections frequently follow traumatic injury, implying the implantation of either environmental or the patient's own C. difficile spores with the subsequent development of clinical infection. It is noteworthy that except for cases involving the small intestine and reactive arthritis, most of the cases of extracolonic C. difficile disease do not appear to be strongly related to previous antibiotic exposure. The reason for this is unclear. We hope that clinicians will become more aware of these extracolonic manifestations of infection, so that they may be recognized and treated promptly and appropriately. Such early diagnosis may also serve to prevent extensive and perhaps unnecessary patient evaluations, thus improving resource utilization and shortening length of hospital stay.
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2/4. Singular case of tardive anastomotic disjunction in a Dacron R vascular graft.

    We investigated a case of anastomotic disjunction of the termino-lateral insertion of a bifurcate aortic graft in the right external iliac artery. The graft in woven Dacron R n. 19, was implanted in 1977 and the left femoral insertion became infected shortly after surgery. The infection was treated according to standard procedures with removal of the infected branch, reconstruction with the transobturatory by-pass and antibiotics. For antibiotic treatment of local and general sepsis the approach was completely new as regards dose regimen and duration. In 1993 a pseudoaneurysm developed through weakening of the right iliac anastomosis. In view of the anamnesis we were surprised to find that the origin was of a mechanical nature.
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3/4. Pelvic necrosis: a complication of infected aortic graft excision.

    infection is a devastating complication of synthetic aortic graft surgery. patients with significant occlusive atherosclerosis of the internal iliac arteries undergoing aortic graft removal for graft infection may be at risk of pelvic and midbody necrosis. An unusual and fatal complication of this nature associated with the management of synthetic aortic graft infection has been encountered in two patients treated by extra-anatomic revascularization and staged removal of the infected aortic prosthesis. The hallmark of their presentation was pelvic and midbody necrosis in the presence of excellent distal perfusion with palpable pulses. Marginal pelvic circulation was therefore compromised further by graft removal and absence of retrograde pelvic perfusion. The finding of focal ischemic changes in the pelvic area of a patient with increasing serum creatinine phosphokinase activity, leukocytosis, myoglobinuria and paraplegia following infected aortic graft removal signals a grave and fatal prognosis.
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4/4. Repair of fungal aortic prosthetic valve endocarditis associated with periannular abscess.

    The incidence of prosthetic valve endocarditis is 2-4%; in most cases the involved organisms are staphylococcus epidermidis and Staph. aureus. Fungal endocarditis is much less common (incidence < 0.1%), but it is often fatal, with a long-term mortality rate of 90-100%. Most fungal endocarditis cases occur after aortic valvular surgery, due to candida sp. Late-onset symptoms, long-term development and aggressive nature of the fungus makes its eradication complicated and treatment difficult. Fungal valvular mycoses produce systemic embolization and cause serious perioperative bleeding on resection of infected tissue. Usually surgery includes aortic root replacement with an aortic homograft conduit after radical debridement, to attain local sterilization. This report describes a patient with complex infection, requiring replacement of an infected prosthetic valve with an aortic homograft conduit, aggressive and radical debridement of infected tissue, and reconstruction using biologic tissues. The case demonstrates the importance of perioperative and long-term antifungal treatment and presents a modified 'Cabrol procedure' to prevent critical intraoperative hemorrhage.
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