Essay sample library > Tibial Osteomyelitis Caused by Gordonia Bronchialis in an Immunocompetent Patient: A Case Report and Review of Literature

Tibial Osteomyelitis Caused by Gordonia Bronchialis in an Immunocompetent Patient: A Case Report and Review of Literature

2023-10-27 23:20:18

Case report: A 22-year-old woman with healthy immune function who has received no previous history, undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery and left lateral meniscus laceration for left anterior cruciate ligament after exercise-related injury. She performed Hamstring autograft reconstruction and partial menisctomy from the same foot. Three months after surgery, she formed two erythema, swelling and pain areas around the harvested incision site, formed a small abscess and drained a small amount of suppurative fluid.

Chronic arterial occlusive disease: mainly caused by atherosclerosis. It usually includes the femoral artery or aortic artery (50% of cases). However, in diabetic patients it may also include the anterior tibial artery, the posterior tibial artery, and the radial artery. In medicine, it manifests as intermittent claudication, that is as a foot deep foot walking while walking in several spaces, again reassuring with a 5-10 minute rest and walking again in the same space. They follow the leg artery and eventually flow into the femoral vein and continue as the external iliac vein. Known as the deep vein: vein of the anterior tibial and posterior tibial arteries, pop vein and femoral vein. Deep vein receives muscle compression (muscle vein pump) to reduce venous return

Osteomyelitis in patients with sickle cell disease may be caused by many organisms, but more than half of cases are caused by Salmonella, a rare biological substance. The cause of salmonella incidence increase is not clear. Osteomyelitis is most common in long bones, and about half of cases occur in children under 5 years of age. Identification of osteomyelitis and acute bone infarction can be difficult because both may cause fever, pain and local tenderness and swelling. X - ray photographic changes of osteomyelitis are not usually noticed even though they are presented. Tc - sulfur colloidal bone scan may be useful

Osteomyelitis (bacterial bone infection) is the most common cause of SCD osteomyelitis, which is Salmonella (especially Salmonella, Salmonella enteritidis, Salmonella cholerae and Salmonella paratyphoid A atypical serotype). And Gram negative enterobacter may be due to intravascular sickle cell disease intestinal tract caused by mottled ischemic infarction. Pulmonary hypertension (elevated pulmonary artery pressure) can cause a risk of right ventricular tension or heart failure; typical symptoms are shortness of breath, decreased exercise tolerance, and syncope. At the time of examination, 21% of children and 30% of adults had signs of pulmonary hypertension; this was associated with a decrease in walking distance and an increase in mortality