Gas gangrene as a manifestation of endogenous Clostridium septicum infection

Gas gangrene as a manifestation of endogenous Clostridium septicum infection


Fille,M.; Allerberger,F.; Koller,W.; Hackl,J.; Lingnau,W.; Tilg,H.; Ambach,E.; Kreczy,A.; Gschnitzer,F.; Semenitz,E.;

Endogenous, nontraumatic clostridial myonecrosis has a frequent association with colon carcinoma, leukemia, diabetes mellitus, and drug-induced immunosuppression. We present two cases of Clostridium septicum myonecrosis. An 18-year-old girl developed severe abdominal pain on day 7 after hospitalization for cytostatic treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Blood cultures yielded Clostridium septicum and histopathological exam of muscle tissue showed extended myonecrosis. Eventually the patient recovered with antibiotics and surgical therapy. A 72-year-old diabetic woman was treated as an outpatient with an intramuscular injection of steroidal antiphlogistics for “acute lumbar disc disease”. The next morning persistence of hip pain and discoloration of the right thigh caused hospitalization under the suspected diagnosis “fracture of the neck of the femur”. Clostridium septicum was cultured from intraoperatively taken swabs. At autopsy, in addition to the gangrene, there was an adenocarcinoma of the cecum, which had not been diagnosed during life

Immun.Infekt. 1995 23(6):224-227