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Title: [Mesh infection in inguinal hernioplasty by Streptococcus dysgalactiae subspecies equisimilis. Case report and review of the literature]. Author: Spaziani E, Di Filippo A, Picchio M, Maragoni M, Briganti M, Ceci F, Greco E, De Angelis F, Pattaro G, Maturo A, Martellucci A, Stagnitti F. Journal: G Chir; 2011; 32(1-2):52-4. PubMed ID: 21352710. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Mesh infection in inguinal herniography is usually caused by Staphilococcus aureus and Staphilcoccus epidermidis. Generally it obliges to prosthesis removal with hernia relapse and increase of social costs for the prolongation of hospitalization. CASE REPORT: A 60-year-old woman, obese, undergone 4 months before to left inguinal prosthetic herniorrhaphy complicated by infection of the surgical site which didn't require the explantation of the mesh, although determining an early hernia relapse. She is submitted by the authors to a surgical intervention for left groin hernia relapse with placement of a polypropylene monofilament fixed with prolene. Six hours after the operation she shows systemic symptoms and local signs of prosthesis infection. Cultural examination of the surgical wound secretion allows the identification of Streptococcus dysgalactiae subspecies equisimilis (SDSE). A therapy with Amoxicillin-Clavulanic Acid and Levofloxacine leads to resolution, in 10 weeks, of the infection. DISCUSSION: In our case the infection of the new mesh, appearing prematurely, has been probably favoured by obesity and operative time longer than 3 hours. Conservative treatment has been fulfilled by success for the elevated sensitivity of the SDSE bacterium to penicillin and fluoroquinolones. CONCLUSIONS: Recent epidemiologic studies have demonstrated an increase of infections caused by SDSE, which will probably gain clinical relevance in the next future relatively to surgical prosthetic hernioplasty. In all cases of infection the authors suggest cultural isolation of the casual germ and the execution of the antibiogram because the conservative medical treatment can avoid mesh removal with consequent elevated risk of hernia relapse.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]