Pneumorachis is characterized by the presence of free air in the spinal canal. It is referred by different names in literature such as epidural emphysema, intraspinal air, intraspinal pneumoc(o)ele, spinal epidural and subarachnoid pneumatosis, spinal and epidural emphysema, aerorachia, pneumosaccus, air myelogram, etc. Pneumorachis can be broadly classified as traumatic, iatrogenic, or spontaneous. In this case-based review, we present a case of spontaneous pneumorachis secondary to asthma exacerbation. This is followed by a systematic review of all cases of spontaneous pneumorachis identified in PubMed. The aim of this review is to understand the pathophysiology, common causes and the management of spontaneous pneumorachis.
Introduction
Raoultella planticola
is an aerobic gram-negative rod predominantly found in soil and aquatic environments. The typical reservoirs of
Raoultella
spp. include the gastrointestinal tract and the upper respiratory tract. It usually causes pneumonia, biliary tract infections, and bacteremia. Urinary tract infection (UTI) secondary to
R. planticola
is an uncommon entity. Less than 10 cases of
R. planticola
-associated UTIs in adults have been published in the literature to date.
Objective
This is a single institution retrospective study undertaken to identify the epidemiology, patient characteristics, clinical spectrum, predisposing risk factors and the outcome of patients with UTI caused by
R. planticola.
Results
A total of 37
R. planticola
isolates were identified in urine samples over a 5-year study period. The mean age of the patient population was 77 years. The most common comorbidity was diabetes mellitus, which was present in 16 patients. Only 3 patients had a history of steroid use, an immunosuppressive condition, or were on chemotherapy. The most common presenting complaint was altered mental status followed by fever. Resistance to ampicillin was found in 35 isolates which seems to be an intrinsic characteristic of
Raoultella
spp. and 2 isolates were multidrug-resistant, but still susceptible to ciprofloxacin. The average length of stay was 3 days, and the average duration of antibiotic administration was 8 days. Ciprofloxacin was the most frequently prescribed antibiotic (9 patients). The severity of infection ranged from simple cystitis in 15 patients to urosepsis in 2 patients and septic shock in 2 patients. There were no mortalities in our cohort.
Conclusion
Our study revealed that patients with
R. planticola
UTI had higher proportion of diabetes mellitus, renal failure compared to the general population. Our study also confirms the intrinsic resistance to ampicillin of
Raoultella
spp., which has been documented previously in the literature.
Gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding is a serious complication encountered commonly in patients on chronic anticoagulation and/or antiplatelet agents. There is a lack of guidelines on how to manage antiplatelet/anticoagulant therapy in patients with thrombocytopenia and GI bleeding. This poses a clinical dilemma when a clinician encounters serious GI bleeding in clinical practice. We present a patient with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation and chronic thrombocytopenia who suffered severe GI bleeding less than 2 weeks after a percutaneous coronary intervention while being treated with dual antiplatelet therapy and oral anticoagulation.
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