Pott puffy tumor is almost always associated with an outward extension of suppurative acute frontal sinusitis. Pathogenesis includes osteomyelitis of the frontal bone with local spread of the infection to the outer co...Pott puffy tumor is almost always associated with an outward extension of suppurative acute frontal sinusitis. Pathogenesis includes osteomyelitis of the frontal bone with local spread of the infection to the outer cortex and termination of the suppurative process in a frontal subgaleal abscess. An unusual ectopic location of Pott puffy tumor is the tempo-parietal subgaleal space, located exterior to the squamous portion of the temporal bone. In this location, Pott puffy tumor is considered a suppurative complication of otomastoiditis. Reported here is a 4-year-old boy who developed amoxicillin-resistant acute otitis media, silent mastoiditis, temporal bone subperiosteal abscess, subgaleal abscess, and an epidural abscess. He had several fenestra of the tegmen mastoideum as a result of osteiitis of the temporal bone, which we believe permitted spread of the oto-mastoiditis to temporal bone, subgaleal space, and epidural space. Surgical specimens obtained from the middle ear and subgaleal abscess after 24-hours of intravenously-administered combination antibiotic therapy did not reveal any aerobic or anaerobic bacterial pathogens. This is only the second such pediatric case that we found during a careful search of the literature.展开更多
文摘Pott puffy tumor is almost always associated with an outward extension of suppurative acute frontal sinusitis. Pathogenesis includes osteomyelitis of the frontal bone with local spread of the infection to the outer cortex and termination of the suppurative process in a frontal subgaleal abscess. An unusual ectopic location of Pott puffy tumor is the tempo-parietal subgaleal space, located exterior to the squamous portion of the temporal bone. In this location, Pott puffy tumor is considered a suppurative complication of otomastoiditis. Reported here is a 4-year-old boy who developed amoxicillin-resistant acute otitis media, silent mastoiditis, temporal bone subperiosteal abscess, subgaleal abscess, and an epidural abscess. He had several fenestra of the tegmen mastoideum as a result of osteiitis of the temporal bone, which we believe permitted spread of the oto-mastoiditis to temporal bone, subgaleal space, and epidural space. Surgical specimens obtained from the middle ear and subgaleal abscess after 24-hours of intravenously-administered combination antibiotic therapy did not reveal any aerobic or anaerobic bacterial pathogens. This is only the second such pediatric case that we found during a careful search of the literature.