1 results match your criteria: "Children's Hospital of the King's Daughters and EVMS[Affiliation]"

Acute MRSA sinusitis with intracranial extension and marginal vancomycin susceptibility.

Case Rep Pediatr

October 2013

Department of Pediatrics, Division of Infectious Diseases, Children's Hospital of the King's Daughters and EVMS, Norfolk, VA 23507, USA.

Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is increasingly being described as a cause of acute sinusitis. We present a patient with acute MRSA sinusitis complicated by rapid intracranial extension, marginal vancomycin susceptibility (MIC = 2 mg/L), delayed drainage of intracranial abscess, and subsequent development of rifampin resistance. Given the relatively high risk of intracranial extension of severe acute bacterial sinusitis and high mortality associated with invasive MRSA infections, we suggest early surgical drainage of intracranial abscesses in these circumstances.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF