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CASE REPORT
Gas gangrene presenting with back pain
  1. Mohamed El Sayad1,
  2. Albert Chikate2,
  3. Balasundaram Ramesh3
  1. 1Wishaw General Hospital, Wishaw, UK
  2. 2Bronglaise Hospital, Aberystwyth, UK
  3. 3Glan Clwyd Hospital, Rhyl, UK
  1. Correspondence to Mohamed El Sayad, msayad1{at}hotmail.com

Summary

A 61-year-old Caucasian man (previously fit and well) presented to the emergency department with 2 days of non-traumatic, non-radiating lower back pain. He was admitted to our department having been provisionally diagnosed with discitis. Later that night, while being reassessed, a skin lesion on his thigh appeared and gas could be palpated. The patient was then taken immediately to theatre and a radical surgical debridement was performed. The organism that grew from tissue samples was Clostridium septicum, which when identified is an indication to exclude colonic neoplasms. The patient managed to preserve his limb on this occasion, however, he underwent a right hemicolectomy for what proved to be a colonic tumour at a later date.

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