RESUMO
Lemierre's syndrome, or postanginal sepsis, is an uncommon but potentially fatal infection of the internal jugular vein. The combination of bacteremia, internal jugular vein thrombophlebitis, and metastatic septic emboli secondary to acute pharyngeal infections is characteristic of Lemierre's syndrome. Isolated pathogens are typically oral anaerobic bacteria, most commonly Fusobacterium necrophorum. While the incidence of Lemierre's syndrome has declined over the years, the proportion of cases caused by uncommonly implicated bacteria have been increasingly cited in the literature (1). In this case report, we introduce a novel presentation of Lemierre's syndrome in a patient who presented to the emergency department with neck swelling and shortness of breath and was found to have infectious myositis and bacteremia with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Clinicians should be vigilant of underlying thrombus in patients with neck swelling and infectious myositis as our patient's internal jugular vein thrombus was missed on initial computed tomography read.
RESUMO
Skull base osteomyelitis is an aggressive infection involving bones of the skull. It is a rare complication of malignant otitis externa, caused by the contiguous spread of the infection. Patients are mostly elderly with comorbidities that compromise immunity. It is atypical for Streptococcus species to be encountered in basilar skull osteomyelitis. Here we present the case of an 80-year-old male with multiple comorbidities including diabetes mellitus with a two-month history of right ear pain associated with occasional discharge and diminished hearing who was found to have bacteremia and basilar skull osteomyelitis with Streptococcus pneumoniae isolated from blood and otorrhea fluid cultures. This unusual presentation of S. pneumoniae related skull base osteomyelitis could be attributed to an undiagnosed pancreatic cancer at the time of presentation. Malignant otitis externa can progress into invasive disease in the head and neck; almost all cases tend to be caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa but unusual cases, such as this, can be caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae.