AC TINOMYCOSIS: AN UNUSUAL COMPLICATION OF ORAL SURGERY-A CASE REPORT

author

  • MOHAMMAD HOSEIN KALANTAR MOTAMEDI From the Oral, Maxillofacial and Reconstructive Surgery Clinic, Baqiyalallah Medical Center, Imam Hosein University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran.
Abstract:

Actinomycosis, a rather uncommon infection of the oral cavity, poses and unusual problem: recurrence. Primary or initial diagnosis of the disease is difficult and can be made easier only if the clinician bears in mind a few important facts: a previously compromised site is usually present, a slow, low-grade, almost painless infectious course is prevalent which tends to localize, and responds to short-term antibiotic therapy only to be followed shortly by recurrence. It is stated that with this set of features the patient should be considered to have actinomycosis until proven otherwise. This report presents a rather unusual case of cervicofacial actinomycosis which occurred secondary to an attempted surgical extraction of an impacted maxillary third molar tooth. The organism was sampled under anaerobic conditions, identified, isolated and confirmed by Gram's stain, culture, and biochemical tests, respectively. Cure was obtained only after surgical drainage, debridement, and oral antibiotic administration continuing for approximately three months.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

ac tinomycosis: an unusual complication of oral surgery-a case report

actinomycosis, a rather uncommon infection of the oral cavity, poses and unusual problem: recurrence. primary or initial diagnosis of the disease is difficult and can be made easier only if the clinician bears in mind a few important facts: a previously compromised site is usually present, a slow, low-grade, almost painless infectious course is prevalent which tends to localize, and responds to...

full text

DIPHALLUS: A REPORT OF AN UNUSUAL CASE

We report an unusual case of diphaIlus in a five year old boy. The two organs appeared separately, one orthotopically in the pubic area and the other in the perineum with no urinary meatus. A perineal hypospadias with meatus in the anterior anal verge was also present. The right testis was undescended and the scrotum was mildly bifid. The patient was continent for both voiding and defeca...

full text

An unusual oral squamous cell carcinoma of the mandible, mimicked inflammatory hyperplastic lesions: A case report

        Abstract   Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the most common malignant tumors of oral cavity. The ratio of men to women is about 2: 1. Generally, it   is admitted that 60% of carcinoma of the mandibular gingival are located in the posterior of premolars. Gingiva is one of the less common sites of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Due to the variable clinical and behavioral presentatio...

full text

Horner’s syndrome: an unusual complication of thyroidectomy: a case report

BACKGROUND Horner's syndrome is a very rare complication following surgery of the thyroid gland with only a handful of cases reported in the literature. Exact pathophysiology of post-thyroidectomy Horner's syndrome is not fully understood, and once diagnosed, management remains mostly conservative. CASE PRESENTATION A 36-year-old Sri Lankan Sinhalese woman developed unilateral partial ptosis ...

full text

An unusual complication of total knee replacement: a case report.

After total knee replacement a 57-year-old woman developed increasing pain in her left calf on exercise. This was due to erosion of the popliteal artery by a spur of cement. Removal of the spur with resection and Dacron grafting of the damaged section of the vessel cured her symptoms.

full text

Hemiplegia--an unusual complication of appendectomy. A case report.

A 12-year-old boy developed complete right hemiplegia and 7th cranial nerve palsy 2 days after laparotomy for a perforated appendix. Full recovery took 2 months. Although it can be accepted that the hemiparesis was not caused by acute appendicitis it is postulated that this unusual association was due either to a septic embolus which lodged in the region of the internal capsule or to a minor ce...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 7  issue 2

pages  137- 140

publication date 1993-08

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Keywords

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023