# Escherichia coli Necrotizing Fasciitis After Abdominoplasty Combined With Liposuction: A Report of a Case and Review of the Literature

**Authors:** Charbel B Aoun, Nancy Zeaiter, Elie Moukawam, Majd Hassan, Walid Hreibeh

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.86261 · Cureus · 2025-06-18

## TL;DR

A rare case of Escherichia coli necrotizing fasciitis occurred after abdominoplasty and liposuction, highlighting the need for early detection and proper hygiene in aesthetic surgeries.

## Contribution

This report presents a rare monomicrobial E. coli necrotizing fasciitis case following abdominoplasty and liposuction, emphasizing risk factors and prevention strategies.

## Key findings

- Necrotizing fasciitis can occur after common aesthetic surgeries like abdominoplasty and liposuction.
- E. coli infections may result from poor hygiene, contaminated instruments, or post-sterilization contamination.
- Early recognition and prompt treatment are critical for managing necrotizing fasciitis in low-risk patients.

## Abstract

Abdominoplasty and liposuction rank among the most common aesthetic plastic surgeries and are considered safe procedures, although intraoperative and postoperative complications can occur. Hematoma, seroma, infections, deep venous thrombosis, and death are some of the encountered complications. Necrotizing fasciitis is a rare, severe, and deadly soft-tissue infection that can develop in healthy patients who undergo common aesthetic operations such as abdominoplasty or liposuction. Early detection and treatment of these complications are crucial. This report documents a rare case of monomicrobial Escherichia coli necrotizing fasciitis after abdominoplasty combined with liposuction. Factors associated with a lower risk of complications include being a healthy non-smoker of normal weight, aged under 55 years, having a shorter interval between bariatric and cosmetic surgery, ensuring proper hand hygiene, and exercising extreme caution during abdominal flap undermining. Exceptionally rare cases of E. coli infections following abdominoplasty or liposuction were described in the literature. Several hypotheses can explain the E. coli infection that can complicate these surgeries, such as poor hand hygiene in some patients, contamination during perioperative care, delayed pre-processing cleaning of surgical instruments and the adhesive property of the instruments, post-sterilization contamination, and the translocation hypothesis. This report underscores the importance of early recognition and prompt management of necrotizing fasciitis, even in low-risk patients undergoing common aesthetic procedures.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** necrotizing fasciitis (MONDO:0004835), Escherichia coli infection (MONDO:0020920)
- **Species:** Escherichia coli (taxon 562)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** venous thrombosis (MESH:D020246), E. coli infection (MESH:D004927), infection (MESH:D007239), death (MESH:D003643), Hematoma (MESH:D006406), Necrotizing Fasciitis (MESH:D019115), seroma (MESH:D049291)
- **Species:** Escherichia coli (E. coli, species) [taxon 562], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

55 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12272297/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12272297