Rare multifocal emphysematous osteomyelitis as a complication of metastatic rectal cancer
Todd P Webb, Phu Dang, Jourdan Waddell, Brianna Taylor, Mark Kiefer, Stuart Hoff, Zhamak Khorgami

TL;DR
A rare case of multifocal emphysematous osteomyelitis is reported in a patient with metastatic rectal cancer, highlighting the need for further research into this complication.
Contribution
This paper presents a rare case of multifocal EOM in the context of metastatic rectal cancer, adding to the limited existing literature.
Findings
The patient developed extensive intraosseous gas involving multiple bones after being diagnosed with rectal adenocarcinoma.
Clostridium novyi was identified as the causative pathogen through biopsy culture.
The patient was successfully treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics.
Abstract
Emphysematous osteomyelitis (EOM) is a rare and severe subtype of osteomyelitis where infection potentiates free air into surrounding bone. Existing literature is limited, but diabetes mellitus and malignancy are described as major risk factors. We report a patient that presented with multiple perianal abscesses and was diagnosed with an advanced rectal adenocarcinoma. He was treated with abscess drainage, antibiotics, and diverting colostomy. Several weeks later he was readmitted in septic shock and was found to have extensive areas of intraosseous gas on CT imaging involving the pelvis, thoracic and lumbar spine, left femur, and several ribs bilaterally. Biopsy culture grew Clostridium novyi, a pathogenic obligate anaerobe. The patient was successfully treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics. Only a handful of cases of multifocal EOM exist in current literature. More research is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthopedic Infections and Treatments · Infectious Disease Case Reports and Treatments · Osteomyelitis and Bone Disorders Research
