Article Text
Case Reports: Unusual presentation of more common disease/injury
Pyogenic flexor tenosynovitis due to Kingella kingae in an infant
Abstract
Pyogenic flexor tenosynovitis is relatively common but is seldom reported in young children. Kingella kingae is increasingly recognised as a causative agent. We report on an infant who presented with a palmar deep space infection and pyogenic flexor tenosynovitis caused by K. kingae. K. kingae is a fastidious, often culture-negative, organism which has been increasingly recognised as a cause of paediatric orthopaedic infections, including flexor tenosynovitis. Clinical suspicion should be heightened, and antibiotic coverage broadened in the setting of a positive physical examination and negative blood cultures.
- Primary Care
- Bone and joint infections
- Orthopaedics
- Infant health