
Septic acute Tenosynovitis of the Flexor Hallucis Longus Tendon Complicating a Lower Limb Erysipelas
Author(s) -
Hatim Abid,
Mohammed El Idrissi
Publication year - 2021
Language(s) - English
DOI - 10.47363/jdmrs/2021(2)126
Subject(s) - medicine , erysipelas , tenosynovitis , surgery , context (archaeology) , complication , tendon , dermatology , paleontology , biology
Erysipelas is the most common bacterial dermal-hypodermal acute not necrotizing infection [1,2]. Its evolution is usually mild but can be complicated mainly by local abscess or necrosis [3-7]. In this context osteo-articular complications and septic acute tenosynovitis are rarely described in the literature with a rate of 1.2% [3]. We report in the light of a literature review a case of recurrent erysipelas of the leg in a young patient of 29 years complicated by septic acute tenosynovitis of the flexor hallucis longus (FHL), to remind this complication mainly observed in severe forms of erysipelas which is not the case of our patient.