Abstract

Brain stem abscesses are rare entities that predominantly affect the pons. A wide variety of microorganisms may be implied, depending on the focus of dissemination. We present the case of a female patient with multiple comorbidities who developed multi-lobar pneumonia due to influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 virus during the postoperative period after an emergent cholecystectomy, requiring mechanical ventilation (MV). Following clinical improvement and withdrawal of MV, the patient did not recover consciousness. Forty-eight hours later, imaging exams showed an abscess in the left pontine dorsolateral tegmentum –a region recently associated with coma-. Despite the administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics, the patient died five days later. This case illustrates the importance of considering pontine abscesses as a cause of poor neurological course in critically ill patients, as well as the need for doing imaging exams to rule out intracranial lesions, particularly in coma-associated areas.

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