Necrotizing fasciitis after central venous catheter placement

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Standard

Necrotizing fasciitis after central venous catheter placement. / Leibig, Nico; Hirche, Christoph; Schmidt, Volker J; Bigdeli, Amir K; Kneser, Ulrich; Kremer, Thomas.

I: Surgical Infections, Bind 15, Nr. 6, 12.2014, s. 850-2.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Leibig, N, Hirche, C, Schmidt, VJ, Bigdeli, AK, Kneser, U & Kremer, T 2014, 'Necrotizing fasciitis after central venous catheter placement', Surgical Infections, bind 15, nr. 6, s. 850-2. https://doi.org/10.1089/sur.2014.074

APA

Leibig, N., Hirche, C., Schmidt, V. J., Bigdeli, A. K., Kneser, U., & Kremer, T. (2014). Necrotizing fasciitis after central venous catheter placement. Surgical Infections, 15(6), 850-2. https://doi.org/10.1089/sur.2014.074

Vancouver

Leibig N, Hirche C, Schmidt VJ, Bigdeli AK, Kneser U, Kremer T. Necrotizing fasciitis after central venous catheter placement. Surgical Infections. 2014 dec.;15(6):850-2. https://doi.org/10.1089/sur.2014.074

Author

Leibig, Nico ; Hirche, Christoph ; Schmidt, Volker J ; Bigdeli, Amir K ; Kneser, Ulrich ; Kremer, Thomas. / Necrotizing fasciitis after central venous catheter placement. I: Surgical Infections. 2014 ; Bind 15, Nr. 6. s. 850-2.

Bibtex

@article{31fac30cca2d4fcb971f3cf71a494f56,
title = "Necrotizing fasciitis after central venous catheter placement",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Necrotizing fasciitis (NF) can appear after various penetrating or non-penetrating skin lesions. This is the first reported case in which NF occurred after a central venous line placement. Because of intubation and sedation of the critically ill patient, only local conditions can indicate NF although other decisive symptoms, such as pain out of proportion to physical findings, are not evaluable.METHODS: Case report and review of the literature.RESULTS: A 71-y-old male patient was admitted to the intensive care unit after spine surgery due to post-operative delirium. Because of respiratory failure he had to be intubated and sedated. Ten days after central venous line placement in the right subclavian vein a reddening and swelling of the insertion site was observed but considered as extravasation. When aggravation of the local symptoms occurred, the suspected diagnosis of NF was made and a radical debridement was performed immediately. After a second-look operation, defect closure with a free-flap transfer and split-thickness skin grafting could be achieved.CONCLUSIONS: The first report on NF in a critically ill patient due to a subclavian central intravenous line aims to encourage checking for iatrogenic soft tissue condition in sedated intensive care patients. These patients may have a greater risk of developing NF, because they often have predisposing factors such as diabetes, end-stage renal failure, and immune suppression.",
keywords = "Aged, Central Venous Catheters/adverse effects, Critical Illness, Debridement, Fasciitis, Necrotizing/diagnosis, Humans, Male",
author = "Nico Leibig and Christoph Hirche and Schmidt, {Volker J} and Bigdeli, {Amir K} and Ulrich Kneser and Thomas Kremer",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1089/sur.2014.074",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "850--2",
journal = "Surgical Infections",
issn = "1096-2964",
publisher = "Mary AnnLiebert, Inc. Publishers",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Necrotizing fasciitis after central venous catheter placement

AU - Leibig, Nico

AU - Hirche, Christoph

AU - Schmidt, Volker J

AU - Bigdeli, Amir K

AU - Kneser, Ulrich

AU - Kremer, Thomas

PY - 2014/12

Y1 - 2014/12

N2 - BACKGROUND: Necrotizing fasciitis (NF) can appear after various penetrating or non-penetrating skin lesions. This is the first reported case in which NF occurred after a central venous line placement. Because of intubation and sedation of the critically ill patient, only local conditions can indicate NF although other decisive symptoms, such as pain out of proportion to physical findings, are not evaluable.METHODS: Case report and review of the literature.RESULTS: A 71-y-old male patient was admitted to the intensive care unit after spine surgery due to post-operative delirium. Because of respiratory failure he had to be intubated and sedated. Ten days after central venous line placement in the right subclavian vein a reddening and swelling of the insertion site was observed but considered as extravasation. When aggravation of the local symptoms occurred, the suspected diagnosis of NF was made and a radical debridement was performed immediately. After a second-look operation, defect closure with a free-flap transfer and split-thickness skin grafting could be achieved.CONCLUSIONS: The first report on NF in a critically ill patient due to a subclavian central intravenous line aims to encourage checking for iatrogenic soft tissue condition in sedated intensive care patients. These patients may have a greater risk of developing NF, because they often have predisposing factors such as diabetes, end-stage renal failure, and immune suppression.

AB - BACKGROUND: Necrotizing fasciitis (NF) can appear after various penetrating or non-penetrating skin lesions. This is the first reported case in which NF occurred after a central venous line placement. Because of intubation and sedation of the critically ill patient, only local conditions can indicate NF although other decisive symptoms, such as pain out of proportion to physical findings, are not evaluable.METHODS: Case report and review of the literature.RESULTS: A 71-y-old male patient was admitted to the intensive care unit after spine surgery due to post-operative delirium. Because of respiratory failure he had to be intubated and sedated. Ten days after central venous line placement in the right subclavian vein a reddening and swelling of the insertion site was observed but considered as extravasation. When aggravation of the local symptoms occurred, the suspected diagnosis of NF was made and a radical debridement was performed immediately. After a second-look operation, defect closure with a free-flap transfer and split-thickness skin grafting could be achieved.CONCLUSIONS: The first report on NF in a critically ill patient due to a subclavian central intravenous line aims to encourage checking for iatrogenic soft tissue condition in sedated intensive care patients. These patients may have a greater risk of developing NF, because they often have predisposing factors such as diabetes, end-stage renal failure, and immune suppression.

KW - Aged

KW - Central Venous Catheters/adverse effects

KW - Critical Illness

KW - Debridement

KW - Fasciitis, Necrotizing/diagnosis

KW - Humans

KW - Male

U2 - 10.1089/sur.2014.074

DO - 10.1089/sur.2014.074

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25493536

VL - 15

SP - 850

EP - 852

JO - Surgical Infections

JF - Surgical Infections

SN - 1096-2964

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 329568527