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I get called relatively frequently to the rehab floor at the teaching hospital where I do all my cases to bust on some nails. I never mind doing this because the hospital is literally walking distance to one of my offices and most of these patients end up making their way to my office eventually and end up sending their family blah, blah, blah.
One of those cases turned out to be one of the most unique I've ever seen in my career so far.
I got called to see a rehab patient so I brought along my nail busters and almost dropped them when I walked in to see this patient.
Here's the story:
This poor guy came in from the UK for a meeting with some mutual clients and decided to have a little too much to drink the first night he was in town. The next day he has extreme abdominal pain and ends in the ED of this hospital I work out of. The ED Docs call in the Surgeon on call as this patient has acute peritonitis. They then do an emergency lap, which they convert over to an open abdominal lavage and drain ONE LITER of purulence from this gentleman's belly. The patient goes into acute septic shock, and ends up intubated in the ICU. Cultures grew out Strep Pyogenes beta hemolytic.
While in septic shock clinging to life, he develops such severe hypotension, that he develops acute distal ischemia to all of his digits of his hands and feet. He also goes into acute renal failure and is slowly being weaned off of dialysis.
He now has dry gangrene of all of his fingers and half (dorsal and palmar) of his right hand and all of his toes and dorsally just proximal to his MPJs. Plantar feet from tip of the toes to the heel also show dry gangrene with a circular area of fresh healthy tissue in his midarch.
I thought he had developed frostbite, but nope. He has been inhouse for two months now and will likely be sent home by next week on a commercial airline.
At the moment, I was not able to find any literature after about 2 hours on Pubmed about similar documented cases.
Has anyone ever seen anything like this?
One of those cases turned out to be one of the most unique I've ever seen in my career so far.
I got called to see a rehab patient so I brought along my nail busters and almost dropped them when I walked in to see this patient.
Here's the story:
This poor guy came in from the UK for a meeting with some mutual clients and decided to have a little too much to drink the first night he was in town. The next day he has extreme abdominal pain and ends in the ED of this hospital I work out of. The ED Docs call in the Surgeon on call as this patient has acute peritonitis. They then do an emergency lap, which they convert over to an open abdominal lavage and drain ONE LITER of purulence from this gentleman's belly. The patient goes into acute septic shock, and ends up intubated in the ICU. Cultures grew out Strep Pyogenes beta hemolytic.
While in septic shock clinging to life, he develops such severe hypotension, that he develops acute distal ischemia to all of his digits of his hands and feet. He also goes into acute renal failure and is slowly being weaned off of dialysis.
He now has dry gangrene of all of his fingers and half (dorsal and palmar) of his right hand and all of his toes and dorsally just proximal to his MPJs. Plantar feet from tip of the toes to the heel also show dry gangrene with a circular area of fresh healthy tissue in his midarch.
I thought he had developed frostbite, but nope. He has been inhouse for two months now and will likely be sent home by next week on a commercial airline.
At the moment, I was not able to find any literature after about 2 hours on Pubmed about similar documented cases.
Has anyone ever seen anything like this?
