Clostridium paraputrificum septicemia and liver abscess

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Abstract

We report the first case of a healthy 23-year-old female who underwent an interventional radiology-guided embolization of a hepatic adenoma, which resulted in a gas forming hepatic liver abscess and septicemia by Clostridium paraputrificum . A retrospective review of Clostridial liver abscesses was performed using a PubMed literature search, and we found 57 clostridial hepatic abscess cases. The two most commonly reported clostridial species are C. perfringens and C. septicum (64.9% and 17.5% respectively). C. perfringens cases carried a mortality of 67.6% with median survival of 11 h, and 70.2% of the C. perfringens cases experienced hemolysis. All C. septicum cases were found to have underlying liver malignancy at the time of the presentation with a mortality of only 30%. The remaining cases were caused by various Clostridium species, and this cohort's clinical course was significantly milder when compared to the above C. perfringens and C. septicum cohorts.

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Kwon, Y. K., Cheema, F. A., Maneckshana, B. T., Rochon, C., & Sheiner, P. A. (2018). Clostridium paraputrificum septicemia and liver abscess. World Journal of Hepatology, 10(3), 388–395. https://doi.org/10.4254/wjh.v10.i3.388

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