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Surgical treatment of delayed cervical infection and incomplete quadriplegia with fish-bone ingestion: A case report. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A case study of a 73-year-old woman revealed a rare instance of incomplete quadriplegia caused by cervical infections linked to fish bone ingestion, despite initial negative CT scans and lack of discomfort.
  • The patient presented with neck pain and weakness in her limbs after ingesting a fish bone, but did not show typical symptoms or signs on imaging tests.
  • Following emergency surgery to manage the abscess and remove necrotic tissue, the patient's motor strength improved significantly, underscoring the importance of considering pharyngeal perforations in similar cases.

Article Abstract

Background: The most commonly ingested foreign body in Asians is fish bone. The vast majority of patients have obvious symptoms and can be timely diagnosed and treated. Cases of pyogenic cervical spondylitis and diskitis with retropharyngeal and epidural abscess resulting in incomplete quadriplegia due to foreign body ingestion have been rarely reported. The absence of pharyngeal or esophageal discomfort and negative computed tomography (CT) findings of fish bone have not been reported. We report the case of an elderly female patient with delayed cervical infection and incomplete quadriplegia who had a history of fish bone ingestion.

Case Summary: A 73-year-old woman presented with right neck pain and weakness of four limbs for a week, and had a history of fish bone ingestion and negative findings on laryngoscopic examination one month previously. She did not complain of any pharyngeal or esophageal discomfort. Cervical magnetic resonance imaging showed C4/C5 spondylitis and diskitis along with retropharyngeal and ventral epidural abscesses. No sign of fish bone was detected on lateral cervical radiography and CT scans The muscle strength of the patient's right lower limb receded to grade 1 and other limbs to grade 2 suddenly on the 10th day of hospitalization. Emergency surgery was performed to drain the abscess and decompress the spinal cord by removing the anterior inflammatory necrotic tissue. Simultaneously, flexible esophagogastroduodenoscopy was carried out and a hole in the posterior pharyngeal wall was found. The motor weakness of the right lower limb improved to grade 3 and the other limbs to grade 4 within 2 d postoperatively.

Conclusion: This rare case highlights the awareness of the posterior pharyngeal or esophageal wall perforation in patients with cervical pyogenic spondylitis along with a history of fish bone ingestion, even though local discomfort symptoms are absent and the radiological examinations are negative.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8464462PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v9.i25.7535DOI Listing

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