Mediastinitis

Mediastinitis is inflammation of the tissues in the mid-chest, or mediastinum. It can be either acute or chronic. It is thought to be due to four different etiologies:[1]

Mediastinitis
Mediastinum
SpecialtyPulmonology 

Acute mediastinitis is usually caused by bacteria and is most often due to perforation of the esophagus. As the infection can progress rapidly, this is considered a serious condition.

Chronic sclerosing (or fibrosing) mediastinitis, while potentially serious, is caused by a long-standing inflammation of the mediastinum, leading to growth of acellular collagen and fibrous tissue within the chest and around the central vessels and airways. It has a different cause, treatment, and prognosis than acute infectious mediastinitis.

Space infections: Pretracheal space – lies anterior to trachea. Pretracheal space infection leads to mediastinitis. Here, the fascia fuses with the pericardium and the parietal pleura, which explains the occurrence of empyema and pericardial effusion in mediastinitis. However, infectious of other spaces can also lead to mediastinitis.

Causes

Mediastinum Anatomy

Acute

CT scan of a patient with Descending Necrotizing Mediastinitis.

Esophageal perforation, a form of direct contamination, accounts for 90% of acute mediastinal infections.[1] Esophageal perforation can arise from vomiting, incidental trauma from a procedure or operation, external trauma, ingestion of corrosive substances, malignancy, or other esophageal disease.[1]

Other causes of acute mediastinitis include infection secondary to cervical disease which arises from dental procedures, skin infections of the neck, neck trauma, or neck procedures.[1]

Descending necrotizing mediastinitis (DNM) was first described by Herman E. Pearse Jr., M.D. in 1938 and he stated, "the term 'mediastinitis' means little unless qualified by a description of its type and kind."[2] Although Descending Necrotizing Mediastinitis is an acute mediastinitis, it is distinct because it does not originate from structures within the mediastinum. Therefore, the term Descending Necrotizing Mediastinitis implies that the infection of the mediastinum originated from a primary site in the head or neck and descended through fascial spaces into the mediastinum.

Chronic

There are two types of fibrosing mediastinitis: granulomatous and non-granulomatous. Granulomatous mediastinitis is due to a granulomatous process of the mediastinal lymph nodes leading to fibrosis and chronic abscesses in the mediastinum. The most common causes are histoplasmosis and tuberculosis infections. Non-granulomatous fibrosing mediastinitis is caused by an idiopathic reaction to drugs and radiation therapy.[3] Autoimmune disease and Behcet's disease are also causes.[4]

Symptoms

Acute

Acute mediastinitis is an infectious process and can cause fever, chills, tachycardia. Pain can occur with mediastinitis but the location of the pain depends on which part of the mediastinum is involved. When the upper mediastinum is involved, the pain is typically retro-sternal pain. When the lower mediastinum is involved, pain can be located between in the scapulae and radiate around to the chest.[5]

Chronic

Symptoms depend on what organs of the mediastinum the disease is affecting. They might be caused by a constricted airway, constricted esophagus, or constricted blood vessels. Symptoms also depend on how mush fibrosis has occurred. There may be cough, shortness of breath, coughing up blood, pain in the chest, and difficulty in swallowing.[4]

Diagnosis

Acute

Acute mediastinitis can be confirmed by contrast x-rays since most cases of acute mediastinitis are due to esophageal perforation. Other studies that can be used include endoscopic visualization, Chest CT scan with oral and intravenous contrast.

With regards to CT Imaging, the extent of involvement of the mediastinum can be evaluated. Therefore, acute mediastinitis can be classified into three categories:[6]

  1. diffuse mediastinitis
  2. isolated mediastinal abscess
  3. mediastinitis or mediastinal abscess complicated by empyema or subphrenic abscess.

Chronic

Most cases of granulomatous mediastinitis (75%) are incidentally found on chest x-rays which show a mediastinal mass, or widening of the mediastinum.[3]

Treatment

Treatment for acute mediastinitis usually involves aggressive intravenous antibiotic therapy and hydration. If discrete fluid collections or grossly infected tissue have formed (such as abscesses), they may have to be surgically drained or debrided.[1]

Treatment for DNM usually requires an operation to remove and drain infected necrotic tissue. Broad spectrum intravenous antibiotics are also given to treat the infection. Patients are typically managed in the intensive care unit due to the severity of the disease.[7]

Treatment for chronic fibrosing mediastinitis is somewhat controversial, and may include steroids or surgical decompression of affected vessels.

Etiology

An observational retrospective study of 17 patients diagnosed with DNM found that the infections most often originated from neck infections including tonsillar abscess, pharyngitis, and epiglottitis. The study also found that most infections are poly-microbial.[7] Often the culprits are usually Gram-positive bacteria and anaerobes, though rarely, Gram-negative bacteria are also present. This severe form represents 20% of acute mediastinitis cases.[8]

Prognosis

Fibrosing mediastinitis can lead to entrapment of mediastinal structures.The mortality of DNM ranges from 10-40% due to sepsis and multi-organ failure if not recognized and intervened upon early.

References

  1. Deatrick, K. Barrett; Long, Jason; Chang, Andrew C. (2015), Doherty, Gerard M. (ed.), "Thoracic Wall, Pleura, Mediastinum, & Lung", CURRENT Diagnosis & Treatment: Surgery (14 ed.), McGraw-Hill Education, retrieved 2018-12-14
  2. Pearse, Herman E. (1938-10-01). "Mediastinitis Following Cervical Suppuration". Annals of Surgery. 108 (4): 588–611. doi:10.1097/00000658-193810000-00009. ISSN 0003-4932. PMC 1387034. PMID 17857255.
  3. Jain, Neeraj; Chauhan, Udit; Puri, Sunil Kumar; Agrawal, Sachin; Garg, Lalit (2015-11-16). "Fibrosing mediastinitis: when to suspect and how to evaluate?". BJR Case Reports. 2 (1): 20150274. doi:10.1259/bjrcr.20150274. PMC 6195926. PMID 30364448.
  4. "Fibrosing mediastinitis | Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center (GARD) – an NCATS Program". rarediseases.info.nih.gov. Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  5. Goodwin, R.A. (1998). Pulmonary Disease and Disorders (3rd Edition). New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 1479–1490.
  6. Carrol, Clark L.; Jeffrey, R. Brooke; Federle, Michael P.; Vernacchia, Fred S. (May 1987). "CT Evaluation of Mediastinal Infections". Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography. 11 (3): 449–454. doi:10.1097/00004728-198705000-00015. ISSN 0363-8715. PMID 3571587.
  7. Schmid, Ralph A.; Wiegand, Jan; Caversaccio, Marco; Hoksch, Beatrix; Kocher, Gregor J. (2012-10-01). "Diffuse descending necrotizing mediastinitis: surgical therapy and outcome in a single-centre series". European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. 42 (4): e66–e72. doi:10.1093/ejcts/ezs385. ISSN 1010-7940. PMID 22761501.
  8. Pota, Vincenzo; Passavanti, Maria Beatrice; Sansone, Pasquale; Pace, Maria Caterina; Peluso, Filomena; Fiorelli, Alfonso; Aurilio, Caterina (2018-03-03). "Septic shock from descending necrotizing mediastinitis – combined treatment with IgM-enriched immunoglobulin preparation and direct polymyxin B hemoperfusion: a case report". Journal of Medical Case Reports. 12 (1): 55. doi:10.1186/s13256-018-1611-5. ISSN 1752-1947. PMC 5834850. PMID 29499757.
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