From dental infection to extradural empyema: a case report

Introduction: Brain infections of dental origin are rare, but well-known and accurately described. There are two different brain infections: brain abscess, the most frequent, and extradural or subdural empyema. Here, we discuss the case of an extradural empyema. Observation: A 28-year-old man with...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Comte Clément, Hasnaoui Nasr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Oral Medicine and Oral Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jomos.org/articles/mbcb/full_html/2019/02/mbcb180061/mbcb180061.html
id doaj-a82b2c76c92e42708979d25733adb9ca
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a82b2c76c92e42708979d25733adb9ca2021-04-02T15:30:02ZengEDP SciencesJournal of Oral Medicine and Oral Surgery2608-13262019-01-012522010.1051/mbcb/2019004mbcb180061From dental infection to extradural empyema: a case reportComte Clémenthttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1915-2883Hasnaoui NasrIntroduction: Brain infections of dental origin are rare, but well-known and accurately described. There are two different brain infections: brain abscess, the most frequent, and extradural or subdural empyema. Here, we discuss the case of an extradural empyema. Observation: A 28-year-old man with a very poor dental condition showed neurological and eye infection signs. A brain and face CT scan revealed extradural empyema, orbit abscess and pansinusitis. These infections had all dental origin: an apical lesion of tooth 26. Discussion: Such severe cases must be surgically and medically treated with a strong antibiotic therapy. A systematic investigation and the treatment of dental infected areas are both necessary.https://www.jomos.org/articles/mbcb/full_html/2019/02/mbcb180061/mbcb180061.htmlempyemaextraduraldentalbrain
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Comte Clément
Hasnaoui Nasr
spellingShingle Comte Clément
Hasnaoui Nasr
From dental infection to extradural empyema: a case report
Journal of Oral Medicine and Oral Surgery
empyema
extradural
dental
brain
author_facet Comte Clément
Hasnaoui Nasr
author_sort Comte Clément
title From dental infection to extradural empyema: a case report
title_short From dental infection to extradural empyema: a case report
title_full From dental infection to extradural empyema: a case report
title_fullStr From dental infection to extradural empyema: a case report
title_full_unstemmed From dental infection to extradural empyema: a case report
title_sort from dental infection to extradural empyema: a case report
publisher EDP Sciences
series Journal of Oral Medicine and Oral Surgery
issn 2608-1326
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Introduction: Brain infections of dental origin are rare, but well-known and accurately described. There are two different brain infections: brain abscess, the most frequent, and extradural or subdural empyema. Here, we discuss the case of an extradural empyema. Observation: A 28-year-old man with a very poor dental condition showed neurological and eye infection signs. A brain and face CT scan revealed extradural empyema, orbit abscess and pansinusitis. These infections had all dental origin: an apical lesion of tooth 26. Discussion: Such severe cases must be surgically and medically treated with a strong antibiotic therapy. A systematic investigation and the treatment of dental infected areas are both necessary.
topic empyema
extradural
dental
brain
url https://www.jomos.org/articles/mbcb/full_html/2019/02/mbcb180061/mbcb180061.html
work_keys_str_mv AT comteclement fromdentalinfectiontoextraduralempyemaacasereport
AT hasnaouinasr fromdentalinfectiontoextraduralempyemaacasereport
_version_ 1721560027495399424