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Proliferative Fasciitis/Myositis Involving the Facial Muscles Including the Masseter Muscle: A Rare Cause of Trismus

Patient: Male, 50 Final Diagnosis: Proliferative fasciitis/myositis Symptoms: Facial swelling • fever • trismus Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Biopsy Specialty: Pathology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Proliferative fasciitis/myositis is a benign disease that can be treated conservatively. H...

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Autores principales: Nishi, Tomoyo M., Yamashita, Shun, Hirakawa, Yuka N., Katsuki, Naoko E., Tago, Masaki, Yamashita, Shu-ichi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6777384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31551403
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.917193
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author Nishi, Tomoyo M.
Yamashita, Shun
Hirakawa, Yuka N.
Katsuki, Naoko E.
Tago, Masaki
Yamashita, Shu-ichi
author_facet Nishi, Tomoyo M.
Yamashita, Shun
Hirakawa, Yuka N.
Katsuki, Naoko E.
Tago, Masaki
Yamashita, Shu-ichi
author_sort Nishi, Tomoyo M.
collection PubMed
description Patient: Male, 50 Final Diagnosis: Proliferative fasciitis/myositis Symptoms: Facial swelling • fever • trismus Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Biopsy Specialty: Pathology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Proliferative fasciitis/myositis is a benign disease that can be treated conservatively. However, some patients are mistakenly treated surgically because of a misdiagnosis of the condition as a malignant tumor. CASE REPORT: A 50-year-old Japanese man developed swelling in his left cheek 12 days before admission; he developed a fever and trismus 3 days later. He was admitted to our hospital because of worsening of his condition despite treatment with sitafloxacin for 5 days and needle-aspiration drainage. On admission, he had a fever of 38.1°C, swelling in his left cheek spreading to the lower jaw, and several dental caries. Although ceftriaxone and clindamycin were administered for 7 days because an odontogenic infection was suspected, his condition did not improve. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of the facial muscles on Day 5 of hospitalization showed swelling and high-intensity signals in the left masseter, temporalis, and pterygoid muscles. Macroscopic findings from a biopsy of the left temporalis muscle performed on Day 17 showed white and thickened fascia. Histopathological examination revealed fibrous hyperplasia of the fascia, increased fibrous connective tissue between muscle fibers, and infiltration of inflammatory cells, providing not a definite but a compatible diagnosis of proliferative fasciitis/myositis. Beginning on Day 18, the patient’s fever lessened with gradual improvement of his facial swelling and trismus. CONCLUSIONS: It is imperative to include proliferative fasciitis/myositis as a possible diagnosis when patients present with facial swelling and trismus of unknown cause.
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spelling pubmed-67773842019-10-17 Proliferative Fasciitis/Myositis Involving the Facial Muscles Including the Masseter Muscle: A Rare Cause of Trismus Nishi, Tomoyo M. Yamashita, Shun Hirakawa, Yuka N. Katsuki, Naoko E. Tago, Masaki Yamashita, Shu-ichi Am J Case Rep Articles Patient: Male, 50 Final Diagnosis: Proliferative fasciitis/myositis Symptoms: Facial swelling • fever • trismus Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Biopsy Specialty: Pathology OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Proliferative fasciitis/myositis is a benign disease that can be treated conservatively. However, some patients are mistakenly treated surgically because of a misdiagnosis of the condition as a malignant tumor. CASE REPORT: A 50-year-old Japanese man developed swelling in his left cheek 12 days before admission; he developed a fever and trismus 3 days later. He was admitted to our hospital because of worsening of his condition despite treatment with sitafloxacin for 5 days and needle-aspiration drainage. On admission, he had a fever of 38.1°C, swelling in his left cheek spreading to the lower jaw, and several dental caries. Although ceftriaxone and clindamycin were administered for 7 days because an odontogenic infection was suspected, his condition did not improve. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of the facial muscles on Day 5 of hospitalization showed swelling and high-intensity signals in the left masseter, temporalis, and pterygoid muscles. Macroscopic findings from a biopsy of the left temporalis muscle performed on Day 17 showed white and thickened fascia. Histopathological examination revealed fibrous hyperplasia of the fascia, increased fibrous connective tissue between muscle fibers, and infiltration of inflammatory cells, providing not a definite but a compatible diagnosis of proliferative fasciitis/myositis. Beginning on Day 18, the patient’s fever lessened with gradual improvement of his facial swelling and trismus. CONCLUSIONS: It is imperative to include proliferative fasciitis/myositis as a possible diagnosis when patients present with facial swelling and trismus of unknown cause. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2019-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6777384/ /pubmed/31551403 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.917193 Text en © Am J Case Rep, 2019 This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Articles
Nishi, Tomoyo M.
Yamashita, Shun
Hirakawa, Yuka N.
Katsuki, Naoko E.
Tago, Masaki
Yamashita, Shu-ichi
Proliferative Fasciitis/Myositis Involving the Facial Muscles Including the Masseter Muscle: A Rare Cause of Trismus
title Proliferative Fasciitis/Myositis Involving the Facial Muscles Including the Masseter Muscle: A Rare Cause of Trismus
title_full Proliferative Fasciitis/Myositis Involving the Facial Muscles Including the Masseter Muscle: A Rare Cause of Trismus
title_fullStr Proliferative Fasciitis/Myositis Involving the Facial Muscles Including the Masseter Muscle: A Rare Cause of Trismus
title_full_unstemmed Proliferative Fasciitis/Myositis Involving the Facial Muscles Including the Masseter Muscle: A Rare Cause of Trismus
title_short Proliferative Fasciitis/Myositis Involving the Facial Muscles Including the Masseter Muscle: A Rare Cause of Trismus
title_sort proliferative fasciitis/myositis involving the facial muscles including the masseter muscle: a rare cause of trismus
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6777384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31551403
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.917193
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