Isolation and identification of S. anginosus from pathologic products are possible to be realised in informed clinical laboratory, allowing so a better knowledge of these infections' incidences and on adequate treatment. The authors' report 11 cases of pyogenic infection caused by S. anginosus. Five out of these 11 cases evaluated as mixed infections, S. anginosus being associated with anaerobic bacteria. 10 children hospitalised in surgery Department of Children Hospital had infections with different localisations; necrotizing fasciitis, preknee cap abscess, generalised peritonitis, abscess postappendectomy, pleurisy and acute mediastinitis, knee arthritis, acute osteomyelitis of mandible and an infection of the fracture's focus in upper 1/3 of the thigh bone. For all these patients the favoring factor was represented by a traumatic or surgical lesion of the skin or diverse mucosa; oral, oesophageal, intestinal, allowing the access of the normal flora of these covers to normally sterile sites. The eleventh case was an adult with a lung abscess and pleurisy, as a complication of an aspiration pneumonia. The treatment of S. anginosus infections consisted especially in penicillin or ampicillin, associated with metronidazol when anaerobic bacteria were present.
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