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Klebsiella pneumoniae infection associated septic pulmonary embolism in an emergency department from east China

Authors :
Bo Gao
Jia-lu Wang
Changqing Zhu
Xiao Bin Zhang
Xiaoye Lu
Qian Yang
Lei Tian
Jia Hua
Source :
Annals of palliative medicine. 10(2)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Septic pulmonary embolism (SPE) is attracting more attention as a special pulmonary sign in severe infection. We aimed to describe the clinical and imaging features of Klebsiella pneumoniae (K. pneumonia)-associated SPE in the emergency department. Methods Records of patients with primarily extrapulmonary infection of K. pneumoniae who were admitted to the emergency department between 2014 and 2019 were retrieved. The identifications of K. pneumoniaeassociated SPE were mainly dependent on the clinical manifestations, typical imaging findings, and presence of a primary source of K. pneumoniae infection. Results A total of 33 cases were identified as SPE with extrapulmonary K. pneumoniae infection. The main clinical manifestations were a febrile/fragile state (100%), respiratory symptoms (18.2%), and digestive symptoms (33.3%). Eight patients (24.2%) developed septic shock, 2 (6.0%) experienced respiratory failure, and 2 (6.0%) complicated endophthalmitis. The major source of infection was liver abscess (n=26, 78.8%), followed by septicemia (n=8, 24.2%), intestinal infection (n=3, 9.1%), and ascites (n=1, 3.0%). The computed tomography (CT) features included the following: peripheral wedge-shaped opacity (n=12, 36.4%), a feeding vessel sign (n=3, 9.1%), multiple nodular lesions (n=5, 15.2%), multifocal lung ill-infiltrations (n=15, 45.5%), patchy ground-glass opacities (n=6, 18.2%), focal consolidations (n=9, 27.3%), lung abscesses (n=4, 12.1%), and pleural effusion (n=21, 63.6%). Re-examination of lung HRCT conducted in 7 patients demonstrated imaging improvement after treatment. Conclusions K. pneumonia-SPE presented special clinical and imaging characteristics, which bear similarities to the signs of pneumonia, but was potentially catastrophic. Identifying SPE in septic conditions is crucial to improving clinical outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
22245839
Volume :
10
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of palliative medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b7585a9ca9297a71d5f90faa40cd7598