Cerebral and Subdural Abscess With Spatio-temporal Multiplicity 12 Years After Initial Craniotomy for Acute Subdural Hematoma

A 34-year-old man presented with a case of subdural empyema and cerebral abscess that developed 12 years after initial neurosurgical intervention for a traffic accident in 1998. Under a diagnosis of acute subdural hematoma and cerebral contusion, several neurosurgical procedures were performed at an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurologia medico-chirurgica 2012-01, Vol.52 (2), p.109-112
Hauptverfasser: WAKUI, Daisuke, NAGiIMA, Goro, TAKADA, Tatsuro, UEDA, Toshihiro, ITOH, Hidemichi, TANAKA, Yuichiro, HiIMOTO, Takuo
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 109
container_title Neurologia medico-chirurgica
container_volume 52
creator WAKUI, Daisuke
NAGiIMA, Goro
TAKADA, Tatsuro
UEDA, Toshihiro
ITOH, Hidemichi
TANAKA, Yuichiro
HiIMOTO, Takuo
description A 34-year-old man presented with a case of subdural empyema and cerebral abscess that developed 12 years after initial neurosurgical intervention for a traffic accident in 1998. Under a diagnosis of acute subdural hematoma and cerebral contusion, several neurosurgical procedures were performed at another hospital, including hematoma removal by craniotomy, external decompression, duraplasty, and cranioplasty. The patient experienced an epileptic seizure, and was referred to our hospital in March 2010. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a cerebral abscess extending to the subdural space just under the previous surgical field. Surgical intervention was refused and antimicrobial treatment was initiated, but proved ineffective. Surgical removal of artificial dura and cranium with subdural empyema, and resection of a cerebral abscess were performed on May 12, 2010. No organism was recovered from the surgical samples. Meropenem and vancomycin were selected as perioperative antimicrobial agents. No recurrence of infection has been observed. Postneurosurgical subdural empyema and cerebral abscess are recently emerging problems. Infections of neurosurgical sites containing implanted materials occur in 6% of cases, usually within several months of the surgery. Subdural empyema and cerebral abscess developing 12 years after neurosurgical interventions are extremely rare. The long-term clinical course suggests less pathogenic organisms as a cause of infection, and further investigations to develop appropriate antimicrobial selection and adequate duration of antimicrobial administration for these cases are needed.
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Under a diagnosis of acute subdural hematoma and cerebral contusion, several neurosurgical procedures were performed at another hospital, including hematoma removal by craniotomy, external decompression, duraplasty, and cranioplasty. The patient experienced an epileptic seizure, and was referred to our hospital in March 2010. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a cerebral abscess extending to the subdural space just under the previous surgical field. Surgical intervention was refused and antimicrobial treatment was initiated, but proved ineffective. Surgical removal of artificial dura and cranium with subdural empyema, and resection of a cerebral abscess were performed on May 12, 2010. No organism was recovered from the surgical samples. Meropenem and vancomycin were selected as perioperative antimicrobial agents. No recurrence of infection has been observed. Postneurosurgical subdural empyema and cerebral abscess are recently emerging problems. Infections of neurosurgical sites containing implanted materials occur in 6% of cases, usually within several months of the surgery. Subdural empyema and cerebral abscess developing 12 years after neurosurgical interventions are extremely rare. 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source DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; J-STAGE (Japan Science & Technology Information Aggregator, Electronic) Freely Available Titles - Japanese
subjects Abscesses
Antimicrobial agents
Blood
Brain
Decompression
Dura mater
Epilepsy
Hematoma
Hospitals
Infection
Magnetic resonance imaging
Meninges
Meropenem
Neurosurgery
Seizures
Skull
subdural empyema
Traffic
Vancomycin
title Cerebral and Subdural Abscess With Spatio-temporal Multiplicity 12 Years After Initial Craniotomy for Acute Subdural Hematoma
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