VISCERAL ABSCESSES
LIVER ABSCESS
- Epidemiology, pathogenesis, and microbiology: Liver abscesses account for up to half of visceral intraabdominal abscesses and are caused most commonly by biliary tract disease (due to aerobic gram-negative bacilli or enterococci) and less often by local spread from pelvic and other IP sources (due to mixed flora including aerobic and anaerobic species, among which B. fragilis is most common) or hematogenous seeding (infection with a single species, usually S. aureus or streptococci such as Streptococcus milleri).
- Amebic liver abscesses are not uncommon, with positive serology in >95% of affected pts.
- Clinical manifestations: Pts have fever, anorexia, weight loss, nausea, and vomiting, but only ∼50% have signs localized to the RUQ, such as tenderness, hepatomegaly, and jaundice. Serum levels of alkaline phosphatase are elevated in ∼70% of pts, and leukocytosis is common. One-third to one-half of pts are bacteremic.
Treatment: Liver Abscess
Treatment: Liver Abscess
- Drainage is the mainstay of treatment (Fig. 84-1), but medical management with long courses of antibiotics can be successful.
- Empirical therapy is the same as for intraabdominal sepsis and secondary bacterial peritonitis.
- Percutaneous drainage tends to fail in cases with multiple, sizable abscesses; with viscous abscess contents that plug the pigtail catheter; with associated disease (e.g., of the biliary tract) requiring surgery; with the presence of yeast; or with lack of response in 4–7 days.
FIGURE 84-1
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Citation
Kasper, Dennis L., et al., editors. "VISCERAL ABSCESSES." Harrison's Manual of Medicine, 20th ed., McGraw Hill Inc., 2020. harrisons.unboundmedicine.com/harrisons/view/Harrisons-Manual-of-Medicine/623720/1/VISCERAL_ABSCESSES.
VISCERAL ABSCESSES. In: Kasper DLD, Fauci ASA, Hauser SLS, et al, eds. Harrison's Manual of Medicine. McGraw Hill Inc.; 2020. https://harrisons.unboundmedicine.com/harrisons/view/Harrisons-Manual-of-Medicine/623720/1/VISCERAL_ABSCESSES. Accessed November 23, 2024.
VISCERAL ABSCESSES. (2020). In Kasper, D. L., Fauci, A. S., Hauser, S. L., Longo, D. L., Jameson, J. L., & Loscalzo, J. (Eds.), Harrison's Manual of Medicine (20th ed.). McGraw Hill Inc.. https://harrisons.unboundmedicine.com/harrisons/view/Harrisons-Manual-of-Medicine/623720/1/VISCERAL_ABSCESSES
VISCERAL ABSCESSES [Internet]. In: Kasper DLD, Fauci ASA, Hauser SLS, Longo DLD, Jameson JLJ, Loscalzo JJ, editors. Harrison's Manual of Medicine. McGraw Hill Inc.; 2020. [cited 2024 November 23]. Available from: https://harrisons.unboundmedicine.com/harrisons/view/Harrisons-Manual-of-Medicine/623720/1/VISCERAL_ABSCESSES.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - ELEC
T1 - VISCERAL ABSCESSES
ID - 623720
ED - Jameson,J Larry,
ED - Loscalzo,Joseph,
ED - Kasper,Dennis L,
ED - Fauci,Anthony S,
ED - Hauser,Stephen L,
ED - Longo,Dan L,
BT - Harrison's Manual of Medicine
UR - https://harrisons.unboundmedicine.com/harrisons/view/Harrisons-Manual-of-Medicine/623720/1/VISCERAL_ABSCESSES
PB - McGraw Hill Inc.
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DB - Harrison's Manual of Medicine
DP - Unbound Medicine
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