Abstract

A 65-year-old woman on peritoneal dialysis (PD) was admitted due to abdominal pain with cloudy PD effluent. The white blood cell count in PD effluent was 5860/µL with 85% polymorphonuclear neutrophils. Therefore, she was clinically diagnosed with peritonitis. The cultures of PD effluent were negative. Initial abdominal computed tomography did not find suggest any intraabdominal pathology. The patient was treated with empirical intraperitoneal antibiotics. Because abdominal pain with cloudy PD effluent persisted, the PD catheter was removed eventually. The culture of the removed PD catheter grew Klebsiella pneumoniae. However, intermittent fever was noted over the following days and empyema developed approximately 2 weeks after PD catheter removal. The culture of pleural fluid also grew K. pneumoniae. Another computed tomography revealed multiple intraabdominal abscesses that was assumed to come from a complication of PD-associated peritonitis. We postulate that the empyema might be caused by transdiaphragmatic extension of the intraabdominal abscesses into the pleural space.

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