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.
CITATION STYLE
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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