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A purulent infection of skeletal muscle that arises from hematogenous spread, usually with abscess formation
Classically an infection of the tropics, although it has been recognized in temperate climates with increasing frequency (most ly in adults, with males affected more than females)
Most patients with tropical pyomyositis are otherwise healthy without underlying comorbidities, while most patients in temperate regions are immunocompromised or have other serious underlying conditions
What is it and Epidemiology
Immunodeficiency: HIV, Diabetes, Malignancy, Cirrhosis, Renal Insufficiency, Organ Transplantation and Immunosuppressive agentsHIV particularly important; the predisposition
to pyomyositis is unclear, but factors may include immune compromise, primary HIV myopathy, antiretroviral therapy, and increased rates of staphylococcal carriage
In a review of 98 cases in North America, about half of pyomyositis patients with underlying medical conditions were seropositive for HIV (Clin Infect Dis 1992)
Predisposing Factors
Trauma: about 25-50% of patients with pyomyositis report a history of trauma. In addition, pyomyositis has been described in temperate regions among athletes performing vigorous exercise, suggesting the potential role of minor muscle damage in the pathogenesis of the disease
Postulation? Possibly related to hematoma formation, followed by infection or increased perfusion due to trauma (making this area a favorable environment for bacteria with additional iron being provided)
Contd
Injection drug use, and concurrent infection (toxocariasis-cat or dog roundworm, varicella infection)
Others
Staphylococcus aureus is the most common cause of pyomyositis; it causes up to 90 percent of tropical cases and up to 75 percent of temperate cases (with MRSA and community acquired strains becoming the most dominant)
Group A streptococci is the second most common pathogen
Usually polymicrobial in diabetic patients
Micro
Hallmark: fever and pain/cramping in single muscle group
Occurs most often in lower extremities (sites include the thigh, calf and gluteal muscles)
Multifocal infection with involvement of more than one muscle group may be observed in up to 20 percent of cases
Clinical Manifestations
Stage 1: crampy local muscle pain, swelling, and low-grade fevermild leukocytosis induration of affected muscle may be present; no
fluctuation; deep abscess may not be discretely palpable, but the muscle may have a "woody" texture on palpation
2% of patients present at this stageStage 2: usually 10-21 days after onset of symptoms
characterized by fever, exquisite muscle tenderness, and edema
frank abscess may be clinically apparentmarked leukocytosis90% present at this stage
STAGES
Stage 3: systemic toxicity, affected muscle is fluctuantComplications of S. aureus bacteremia such as
septic shock, endocarditis, septic emboli, pneumonia, and ARF may be present
Course and presentation is variable with most presenting in Stage 2, however can be indolent, a delay in diagnosis in such cases may result in involvement of multiple muscle groups, requiring prolonged therapy
**Occurs as a result of bacteremia, must r/o endocarditis!
STAGES, contd
Muscle strainContusionHematomaCellulitisDVTOsteomyelitisSeptic arthritisNeoplasmClostridial myonecrosis vs necrotizing fasciitis vs
spontaneous gangrenous myositis vs diabetic muscle infarction vs septic arthritis and other forms of myositis
Differential Dx
Radiology, cultures and lab dataRadiology: Computed tomography (CT) is helpful for
detecting muscle swelling and well-delineated areas of fluid attenuation and rim enhancement with contrast (VIR directed drainage); MRI picks up subtle differences in terms of extent in muscle
Cultures: positive in up to 10 percent of tropical cases and 35 percent of temperate cases
Lab data: leukocytosis with shift, elevated inflammatory markers (ESR, CRP), eosinophilia should raise suspicion for a concomitant parasitic infection
**Counterintuitively, CK levels are often normal
Diagnosis
Although stage 1 pyomyositis can be treated with antibiotics alone, most patients present with stage 2 or 3 disease and therefore require both antibiotics and drainage for definitive management
Drainage: CT-guided percutaneous drainage is the modality of choice when feasible
However, in the setting of deep infection or extensive muscle involvement with significant necrosis, surgical intervention may be required
Diagnostic drainage can also be performed initially to direct antibiotic therapy
Treatment
Abx: For immunocompetent individuals, initial empiric parenteral antibiotic therapy should be directed against staphylococci and streptococci
Empiric therapy for MRSA should be initiated for patients with a previous episode of proven MRSA infection, patients with risk factors for MRSA, and patients with systemic toxicity
In addition, it should be considered in communities where the prevalence of MRSA is greater than 30 percent
For immunocompromised individuals, vancomycin may be combined with a broad spectrum regimen that has activity against gram-negatives and anaerobes
Treament, contd