Pathologic Femur Fracture in an Immunocompetent Healthy Young Adult due to Acute Osteomyelitis.
Evan R J GoyetteNatalia GeorgantzoglouDarcy A KerrYvonne CheungEric R HendersonKonstantinos D LinosPublished in: Case reports in pathology (2023)
An immunocompetent 33-year-old woman presented with a pathologic femur fracture after one month of progressively worsening right thigh pain. Open biopsy demonstrated acute suppurative osteomyelitis despite the lack of clinical risk factors. The polymicrobial infection was successfully treated with three operative procedures and culture-specific antibiotic agents. Acute osteomyelitis, while an uncommon cause of pathologic fracture, must always be on the differential diagnosis, even when no obvious predisposing factors are present. When investigating for an infectious etiology in cases such as our own, considering immunodeficiency syndromes alongside the more typical causes of osteomyelitis is encouraged.
Keyphrases
- liver failure
- respiratory failure
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- risk factors
- drug induced
- aortic dissection
- young adults
- locally advanced
- minimally invasive
- hip fracture
- hepatitis b virus
- spinal cord injury
- radiation therapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- spinal cord
- body composition
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- rectal cancer