1. Chronic Serratia marcescens sternal infection presenting 13 years after coronary artery surgery
- Author
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James R. Sanger, Paul S. Pagel, G. Hossein Almassi, Ashley Chinn, and Michael J Knabel
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Serratia mercescens ,Coronary artery disease ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Abscess ,CABG ,Sinus (anatomy) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Mediastinitis ,Cardiac surgery ,Surgery ,Chronic infection ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Sternal infection ,Bone scintigraphy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Serratia marcescens ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business - Abstract
Highlights • Serratia marcescens is gram-negative facultative anaerobic bacillus. • S. marcescens is responsible for a small percentage of hospital-acquired infections. • S. marcescens infection usually occurs in outbreaks. • This case describes a rare chronic S. marcescens sternal infection., Introduction Serratia marcescens is a facultative anaerobic bacillus that very rarely causes sternal infections. We describe a sternal abscess resulting from chronic S. marcescens infection that presented 13 years after coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG). Presentation of case A 71-year-old diabetic man presented 13 years after CABG with a new distal sternal “mass” that intermittently drained purulent fluid. He was treated with oral antibiotics, but the symptoms persisted. Exploration revealed an abscess extending to the sternal body. A non-absorbable braided suture and a sternal wire were removed, but a sinus tract remained despite further antibiotics and conservative care. Subsequent computed tomography and bone scintigraphy revealed a substernal soft tissue density with bone involvement. An abscess cavity was excised from the substernal anterior mediastinum. Another non-absorbable braided suture was removed. Cultures grew carbapenem-resistant S. marcescens. Discussion Nosocomial or hospital-associated clusters of S. marcescens infection are known, but isolated infections seldom occur. S. marcescens infections in cardiac surgery patients are unusual. Only a single report described a chronic sternal infection resulting from S. marcescens that was identified 15 years after an initial episode caused by the same organism in a heart transplant recipient who was immunocompromised. Diabetes and non-absorbable braided sutures placed for hemostasis at the wire sites were probably contributing factors to our patient’s chronic infection. Conclusion This report described the presentation and treatment of a chronic S. marcescens sternal abscess that occurred 13 years after CABG. Chronic sternal infections due to this organism in cardiac surgery patients are exceeding rare.
- Published
- 2019
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