Sacral osteomyelitis as a rare cause of anorectal pain several years following treatment for rectal carcinoma.
Darren C R FernandesSangeetha SrinivasanHubert Jervoise N AndreyevPublished in: Oxford medical case reports (2022)
A 66-year-old man was treated for a moderately differentiated T3 N1 M0 adenocarcinoma of the rectum in 2015 with preoperative short course radiotherapy, anterior resection and then adjuvant chemotherapy with oxaliplatin and capecitabine. Following ileostomy reversal, he complained of intense, unremitting anorectal pain. After repeated scans, computed tomography (CT) showed findings suggestive of a longstanding anastomotic leak. Subsequent, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed osteomyelitis of the sacrum, with the development of sacral osteomyelitis in this context unusual. Our case highlights the importance of appropriate radiological imaging and that clinicians should consider osteomyelitis as a differential diagnosis in patients presenting with severe anorectal pain after treatment for rectal cancer.
Keyphrases
- rectal cancer
- computed tomography
- locally advanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- contrast enhanced
- chronic pain
- pain management
- neuropathic pain
- dual energy
- positron emission tomography
- squamous cell carcinoma
- early stage
- phase ii study
- high resolution
- radiation therapy
- image quality
- patients undergoing
- magnetic resonance
- randomized controlled trial
- early onset
- spinal cord injury
- radiation induced
- single cell
- postoperative pain
- spinal cord
- newly diagnosed
- metastatic breast cancer