Abstract
Clostridial myonecrosis is a necrotizing soft tissue infection characterized by muscular necrosis and, by extension, that of the surrounding tissue. If this infection develops quickly, it can cause septic shock and death if treatment is delayed. This infection does not occur frequently in civil medicine but nor is it exceptional after traumatic injuries or as a septic infection resulting from certain surgical interventions. Spontaneous development of clostridial myonecrosis is not uncommon (most commonly produced by the Clostridium septicum genus), propagated mainly from the colon in patients with neoplasia and in poor health. Consequently, in patients of bacteremia caused by C. septicum, colonic tumor must be ruled out. We present a new case of C. septicum myonecrosis of the abdominal after elective inguinal hernia repair.
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