Tatsuro Sassa,Ken-ichiro Kobayashi,Masayuki Ota,Takuya Washino,Mayu Hikone,Naoya Sakamoto,Sentaro Iwabuchi,Mizuto Otsuji,Kenji Ohnishi.[J].Chin J Traumatol,2015,18(6):360-362. [doi]
Anterior mediastinal abscess diagnosed in a young sumo wrestler after closed blunt chest trauma
  
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KeyWord: Mediastinal abscess Staphylococcus aureus Sumo wrestler Chest trauma
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Author NameAffiliation
Tatsuro Sassa Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
Ken-ichiro Kobayashi Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
Masayuki Ota Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
Takuya Washino Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
Mayu Hikone Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
Naoya Sakamoto Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
Sentaro Iwabuchi Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
Mizuto Otsuji Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
Kenji Ohnishi Department of Infectious Disease, Tokyo Metropolitan Bokutoh General Hospital 
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Abstract:
      Most mediastinal abscesses result from infections after thoracotomy, esophageal perforation or penetrating chest trauma. This disease is rarely caused by closed blunt chest trauma. All previously reported such cases after closed blunt chest trauma presented with hematoma and sternal osteomyelitis resulting from sternal fracture. Here we report a 15-year-old sumo wrestler who presented with an anterior mediastinal abscess without any mediastinal fracture. The mediastinal abscess resulted from the hematogenous spread of Staphylococcus aureus to a hematoma that might have been caused by a closed blunt chest trauma incurred during sumo wrestling exercises.
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