Anatomia (Aug 2023)

Brain Abscess Secondary to an Apparently Benign Transorbital Injury: An Infrequent Case Report with Literature Review

  • Hakija Bečulić,
  • Emir Begagić,
  • Rasim Skomorac,
  • Aldin Jusić,
  • Edin Selimović,
  • Lejla Čejvan,
  • Mirza Pojskić

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/anatomia2030022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 243 – 252

Abstract

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Intraorbital and transorbital injuries are included in the group of head injuries with low frequency. In particular, such injuries rarely result in infectious processes in the brain parenchyma. This case presents a case where a 57-year-old man reported to the neurosurgery department that he had sustained an injury to the conjunctiva of the upper eyelid a month earlier. The patient was injured by a tree branch, which he removed on his own initiative. After persistent eye abduction palsy, an MRI was performed, which showed a compressive mass in the frontal lobe of the brain. A surgical procedure was indicated, which found a piece of twig 3 mm long inside the abscess. Surgical intervention and antibiotic therapy led to the complete recovery of the patient.

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