Volume 17, Issue 1 950709 pp. e20-e22
Open Access

Sore Throat Progressing to Embolic Sepsis: A Case of Lemierre’s Syndrome

Jacquelyn Dirks

Corresponding Author

Jacquelyn Dirks

Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia, Canada , dal.ca

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Dennis Bowie

Dennis Bowie

Dalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia, Canada , dal.ca

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First published: 01 January 2010
Citations: 9

Abstract

Lemierre’s syndrome is a rare clinical syndrome defined as oropharyngeal sepsis, thrombophlebitis of the internal jugular vein and septic thombo-emboli. It is typically encountered in young, immunocompetent individuals, with a mean incident age of 20 years. The organism that is most commonly associated is an anaerobic Gram-negative bacterium: Fusobacterium species. The defined treatment course is at least six weeks of antibiotics, with the role of anticoagulation being unclear. The present article documents a case of Lemierre’s syndrome complicated by acute renal failure and loculated pleural effusion in an otherwise healthy 16-year-old patient.

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