Lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosis

Pelvic hydatid bone disease is a rare and debilitating condition. Patients often present with symptoms and signs when the disease process is advanced and curative resection is not possible. We present a case of destructive bone hydatid disease affecting the left iliac bone. A 45-year-old woman prese...

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Main Authors: Avaan Govindasamy, Pushpa Raj Bhattarai, Jeff John
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-09-01
Series:Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20499361211047664
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spelling doaj-1c1a72dbea464ad898a99f32383970f42021-09-30T21:33:32ZengSAGE PublishingTherapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease2049-937X2021-09-01810.1177/20499361211047664Lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosisAvaan GovindasamyPushpa Raj BhattaraiJeff JohnPelvic hydatid bone disease is a rare and debilitating condition. Patients often present with symptoms and signs when the disease process is advanced and curative resection is not possible. We present a case of destructive bone hydatid disease affecting the left iliac bone. A 45-year-old woman presented initially 5 years ago with a left pelvic mass to the gynaecology department. Computed tomography (CT) scan done at that time showed a large pelvic, left iliac fossa cystic mass with the destruction of the left iliac bone. Extension of the cystic mass transversed the iliac bone into the posterior soft tissue. Percutaneous biopsy taken showed hydatid cystic disease. The patient was planned for surgery and, however, was lost to follow-up. Four years later, she presented with a history of worsening left pelvic pain with an enlarging, left pelvic mass, and another mass in the posterior gluteal area. In addition, CT imaging showed extensive left iliac bone destruction with posterior soft tissue extension to the gluteus muscle. A multidisciplinary team concluded that complete excision would not result in cure. Thus, complete iliac wing bone reconstruction was not an option in this patient. Instead, palliative measures were deemed in the patient’s best interest to control disease progression and relieve painful pressure-related symptoms from the hydatid cystic mass. The patient received preoperative albendazole and underwent an extraperitoneal debulking of the soft tissue hydatid infiltration and debridement of bony fragments from left iliac bone destruction. Postoperatively, the patient did well, and her main complaint of pain related to the cystic mass pressure had improved significantly.https://doi.org/10.1177/20499361211047664
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Avaan Govindasamy
Pushpa Raj Bhattarai
Jeff John
spellingShingle Avaan Govindasamy
Pushpa Raj Bhattarai
Jeff John
Lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosis
Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease
author_facet Avaan Govindasamy
Pushpa Raj Bhattarai
Jeff John
author_sort Avaan Govindasamy
title Lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosis
title_short Lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosis
title_full Lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosis
title_fullStr Lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosis
title_full_unstemmed Lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosis
title_sort lytic parasitic: a case of bone destructing echinococcosis
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease
issn 2049-937X
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Pelvic hydatid bone disease is a rare and debilitating condition. Patients often present with symptoms and signs when the disease process is advanced and curative resection is not possible. We present a case of destructive bone hydatid disease affecting the left iliac bone. A 45-year-old woman presented initially 5 years ago with a left pelvic mass to the gynaecology department. Computed tomography (CT) scan done at that time showed a large pelvic, left iliac fossa cystic mass with the destruction of the left iliac bone. Extension of the cystic mass transversed the iliac bone into the posterior soft tissue. Percutaneous biopsy taken showed hydatid cystic disease. The patient was planned for surgery and, however, was lost to follow-up. Four years later, she presented with a history of worsening left pelvic pain with an enlarging, left pelvic mass, and another mass in the posterior gluteal area. In addition, CT imaging showed extensive left iliac bone destruction with posterior soft tissue extension to the gluteus muscle. A multidisciplinary team concluded that complete excision would not result in cure. Thus, complete iliac wing bone reconstruction was not an option in this patient. Instead, palliative measures were deemed in the patient’s best interest to control disease progression and relieve painful pressure-related symptoms from the hydatid cystic mass. The patient received preoperative albendazole and underwent an extraperitoneal debulking of the soft tissue hydatid infiltration and debridement of bony fragments from left iliac bone destruction. Postoperatively, the patient did well, and her main complaint of pain related to the cystic mass pressure had improved significantly.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20499361211047664
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