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Canadian Journal of Anesthesia 50:450-453 (2003)
© Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society, 2003

Regional Anesthesia and Pain

Epidural abscess in a patient with dorsal hyperhidrosis

[Un abcès péridural chez un patient souffrant d’hyperhidrose dorsale]

Masanobu Ide, MD, Shigeru Saito, MD, Masayuki Sasaki, MD and Fumio Goto, MD

From the Department of Anesthesiology and Reanimatology, Gunma University School of Medicine, Maebashi, Japan.

Address correspondence to: Dr. Shigeru Saito, Department of Anesthesiology and Reanimatology, Gunma University School of Medicine, 3-39-22, Showa-machi, Maebashi, 371-8511, Japan. Phone: +81-27-220-8454; Fax: +81-27-220-8473; E-mail: shigerus{at}showa.gunma-u.ac.jp

Purpose: To report the management of a patient who developed a lumbar epidural abscess when an epidural catheter was placed three years after a thoracic sympathectomy. The possible contribution of hyperhidrosis is discussed.

Clinical features: A 62-yr-old male had compensatory hyperhidrosis in his back after thoracic sympathectomy. The patient, who suffered from thromboangeitis obliterans, underwent lumbar (L2–3) epidural catheterization in order to improve arterial circulation and ameliorate resting pain in his left leg. On the third day after catheterization, the patient complained of a dull pain in his back. Emergency magnetic resonance imaging revealed a 12-mm abscess in the epidural space. On the tenth day after catheterization, laminotomy at the 3–4 lumbar vertebrae and local drainage were performed. A 14-mm abscess was removed from the epidural space. The patient was discharged on day 21 after catheterization without any disability.

Conclusion: Special precautions against infection may be necessary in patients with hyperhidrosis in the area where continuous epidural catheterization is attempted.




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K. C. Cummings and J. A. Dolak
Case report: Epidural abscess in a parturient with pruritic urticarial papules and plaques of pregnancy (PUPPP): [Presentation de cas : un abces peridural chez une parturiente qui presente des papules et des plaques prurigineuses urticariennes de la grossesse (PPPUG)].
Can J Anesth, October 1, 2006; 53(10): 1010 - 1014.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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