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Ludwig angina and sudden death.

Abbie TuJohn D GilbertRoger W Byard
Published in: Forensic science, medicine, and pathology (2021)
A 27-year-old man presented to hospital with neck swelling and difficulty breathing following a recent tooth extraction. He underwent uncomplicated surgical drainage of the submandibular region after which he became acutely short of breath and collapsed and was not able to be resuscitated. At autopsy the major findings were swelling of the neck due to diffuse cellulitis with edema and neutrophil infiltrates within connective tissue and marked submucosal edema of the epiglottis, glottic inlet and tonsils sufficient to cause airway obstruction. Cultures from the site of surgical intervention showed a mixed growth of Gram positive and negative bacilli and Gram positive cocci. Death was due to airway obstruction resulting from marked submucosal edema of the glottic inlet associated with submandibular cellulitis (Ludwig's angina) following extraction of a right lower first molar tooth. Lethal Lugwig angina, although rare in current forensic practice, may still present as a cause of acute upper airway occlusion and must be considered in the differential diagnosis of significant upper airway compromise.
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