Home > Journals > Medicine > European Journal of Dermatology > summary
 
      Advanced search    Shopping cart    French version 
 
Latest books
Catalogue/Search
Collections
All journals
Medicine
European Journal of Dermatology
- Current issue
- Archives
- Subscribe
- Order an issue
- More information
Biology and research
Public health
Agronomy and biotech.
My account
Forgotten password?
Online account   activation
Subscribe
Licences IP
- Instructions for use
- Estimate request form
- Licence agreement
Order an issue
Pay-per-view articles
Newsletters
How can I publish?
Journals
Books
Help for advertisers
Foreign rights
Book sales agents



 

Texte intégral de l'article
 
Printable version

Empyema necessitatis revisited


European Journal of Dermatology. Volume 20, Number 1, 115-9, January-February 2010, Clinical report

Free Article  

Author(s) : Mar Llamas-Velasco, Inmaculada Domínguez, Enrique Ovejero, Silvia Pérez-Gala, Amaro García-Diez

Summary : Empyema necessitatis (EN) is a rare disease, with unknown incidence, which has received little attention from a dermatological point of view but it is essential to recognize it because of the possibility of causing mortality if not treated properly and in time. We report a 32-year-old woman, diagnosed with nervous anorexia, with an enlarging mass on the anterior right thoracic wall. Cultures showed Actinomyces gerencseriae as the main etiological agent of her empyema “necessitatis”. She was successfully treated with amoxicillin with clavulanic acid. We found that 1) M. tuberculosis (35%) is still the most frequent agent, but Actinomyces (25%) and MRSA (10%) are becoming more relevant\; 2) the most frequent dermatological finding is a subacute erythematous mass on costal wall\; 3) new treatments have lowered mortality. Any enlarging and painful subacute thoracic mass with fluctuation should be considered as an EN suspicious lesion and the diagnostic approach must include a chest X-ray to rule out lung infection. Dermatologists should know about this infrequent entity in order to properly identify the potentially life-threatening process under these cutaneous lesions, achieving an early diagnosis and proper treatment.

Keywords : empyema pleural, thoracic mass, actinomyces, anorexia nervosa, combined modality therapy

 

About us - Contact us - Conditions of use - Secure payment
Latest news - Conferences
Copyright © 2007 John Libbey Eurotext - All rights reserved
[ Legal information - Powered by Dolomède ]