1. Delayed implant infection with Cutibacterium acnes ( Propionibacterium acnes ) 30 years after silicone sheet orbital floor implant.
- Author
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Vichitvejpaisal P, Dalvin LA, Lally SE, and Shields CL
- Subjects
- Blepharoptosis surgery, Device Removal, Diplopia surgery, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections surgery, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Orbital Fractures surgery, Prosthesis-Related Infections surgery, Silicones, Blepharoptosis microbiology, Diplopia microbiology, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections microbiology, Orbital Implants microbiology, Propionibacterium acnes, Prosthesis-Related Infections microbiology
- Abstract
Purpose : To report a case of delayed implant infection with Cutibacterium acnes ( C. acnes , previously known as Propionibacterium acnes ) 30 years after silicone sheet orbital floor implant. Methods : Case report with orbital imaging. Results : A 61-year-old male with a history of traumatic orbital floor fracture right eye (OD) repaired using a silicone sheet orbital floor implant 30 years prior, presented with 6 months of painless blepharoptosis and diplopia OD. On examination, there was 3 mm right upper eyelid blepharoptosis and hyperglobus. There was no globe proptosis, dysmotility, or compression and no cutaneous erythema, hyperthermia, discharge, or tenderness to palpation. Orbital magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a cystic mass in the inferior orbit in the region of the floor implant, measuring 25 mm in diameter and 10 mm in thickness. By MRI, T1-weighted images revealed a hypointense signal within the mass and T2-weighted images showed hyperintense signal with a flat hypointensity centrally representing the floor implant. Microbiologic cultures grew C. acnes . Conclusions : C. acnes can manifest several decades after placement of an orbital prosthetic implant, leading to delayed infection.
- Published
- 2020
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