J Korean Soc Emerg Med.  2005 Jun;16(3):346-351.

Clinical Presentations, Diagnosis, and Treatments of a Psoas Abscess

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Emergency Medicine, Seoul National University, College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. suhgil@snu.ac.kr
  • 2Department of General Surgery, Seoul National University, College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
A psoas abscess is a rare, but life-threatening disease. We report 11 cases of a psoas abscess in adults and discuss its clinical presentations, diagnosis, and treatments.
METHODS
Retrospective analysis of patients who presented to the emergency department with a psoas abscess from Jan. 2000 to Aug. 2004 was conducted.
RESULTS
Of the 11 patients with a psoas abscess, 9 (81.8%) had a secondary psoas abscess. The most common causes of the secondary psoas abscess were various invasive procedures, such as acupuncture, a nerve block, etc. The main clinical presentations were fever (72.7%) and back pain (45.5%). The mean time to presentation was 12.0+/-10.6 days. All patients had leukocytosis and elevated CRP. Computed tomography (81.8%) and magnetic resonance imaging (18.2%) were performed for the diagnosis. The mean diagnostic lag time (from admission to the treatment) was 7.8+/-7.5 days. All patients received intravenous antibiotics. Four patients (36.4%) underwent surgical drainage, and three patients (27.3%) underwent percutaneous drainage. Two patients (18.2%) were treated with simple aspiration, and another two (18.2%) received no procedure. Six patients (54.5%) had complications. Three (27.3%) had a recurrent abscess, and two (18.2%) had a epidural abscess. In one patient, femoral neuropathy developed. The time from clinical presentation to diagnosis in the complication associated group was longer than it was in complication non-associated group (27.5+/-19.6 vs 10.6+/-3.2 days, p=0.03).
CONCLUSION
A psoas abscess is difficult to diagnose because of vague clinical symptoms and can have serious complications if the diagnosis is missed or delayed.

Keyword

Psoas abscess

MeSH Terms

Abscess
Acupuncture
Adult
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Back Pain
Diagnosis*
Drainage
Emergency Service, Hospital
Epidural Abscess
Femoral Neuropathy
Fever
Humans
Leukocytosis
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Nerve Block
Psoas Abscess*
Retrospective Studies
Anti-Bacterial Agents
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