Volume 39, Issue 4 pp. 441-445
CASE HISTORY REPORT

Thoracic pain associated with an odontogenic infection: An unusual Lemierre's syndrome

Bianca Scopel Costa

Bianca Scopel Costa

Dentistry of the Cassiano Antônio Moraes University Hospital, Vitória, Brazil

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Eduardo Filipe da Paz Scardua

Eduardo Filipe da Paz Scardua

Dentistry of the Cassiano Antônio Moraes University Hospital, Vitória, Brazil

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Wyllyam Loss dos Reis

Wyllyam Loss dos Reis

Intensive care physician of the Cassiano Antônio Moraes University Hospital, Vitória, Brazil

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Daniela Nascimento Silva

Daniela Nascimento Silva

Department of Dental Clinic, Espírito Santo Federal University, Vitória, Brazil

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Teresa Cristina Rangel Pereira

Teresa Cristina Rangel Pereira

Department of Dental Clinic, Espírito Santo Federal University, Vitória, Brazil

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Sergio Lins de Azevedo Vaz

Sergio Lins de Azevedo Vaz

Department of Dental Clinic, Espírito Santo Federal University, Vitória, Brazil

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Tânia Regina Grão Velloso

Corresponding Author

Tânia Regina Grão Velloso

Department of Dental Clinic, Espírito Santo Federal University, Vitória, Brazil

Correspondence

Tânia Regina Grão Velloso, Rua Desembargador Euripedes Queiroz do Valle, 270, apto 502, Jardim Camburi, Vitória, ES, CEP 29090-090, Brazil.

Email: [email protected]

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First published: 13 June 2019
Citations: 5

Abstract

Lemierre's syndrome is characterized by thrombophlebitis in the internal jugular vein after an infection in the area of the head or neck, mostly in the form of pharyngitis and/or tonsillitis. It may also result from less common conditions, such as odontogenic infections, but this condition has not often been reported in the dental literature. The syndrome's main etiological agent is Fusobacterium necrophorum, and it most commonly occurs in young adults. This study reports the clinical case of a 34-year-old female patient of poor socioeconomic status with a history of pericoronitis, who reported having a chest pain that radiated to the upper limbs, along with dyspnea. The computed tomography of her neck provided evidence of an acute thrombus in the right internal jugular vein. The treatment comprised antibiotic and anticoagulant therapy in addition to the extraction of her third molar and some residual roots. This report highlights the perils of systemic complications through dental infection, including the risk of death.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

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