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Retropharyngeal abscess

Quick Overview

  • Definition: A purulent collection in the retropharyngeal space, extending from the skull base to T3; most common in children <6 years due to retropharyngeal lymph nodes, but can also occur in adults.
  • Risk? Risk of airway obstruction, extension into the danger space down to the mediastinum (descending mediastinitis), jugular vein thrombosis, and vascular/neurologic injury.
  • Microbiology: Mixed oral flora, both aerobic and anaerobic: β-hemolytic streptococci, S. aureus, S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, Fusobacteria, etc. (anaerobic coverage always important).

Rapid Assessment in the Emergency Room (Triage → ABC)

  1. A – Airway first:
    • Warning signs: stridor, muffled/altered voice, drooling, tachypnea, “sniffing” posture, rapid deterioration.
    • Do not forcefully inspect the oropharynx or depress the tongue aggressively if airway compromise is suspected.
    • Prepare for intubation in the OR with anesthesia + ENT, and have a backup plan (tracheostomy/cricothyrotomy) if failed.
  2. B – Breathing & C – Circulation: Monitor SpO₂, give IV fluids if dehydrated, provide analgesics and antipyretics.
  3. Labs: CBC, CRP/ESR, blood cultures before antibiotics when feasible.

Imaging

1) CECT (Contrast-Enhanced CT) — the practical standard in the ED

  • When? Strong clinical suspicion, suspected deep/mediastinal spread, or when surgical drainage is being considered.
  • Provides anatomical extension/volume mapping. However: not perfect in distinguishing abscess vs. phlegmon (positive predictive value limited).
  • How to read it? Look for a rim-enhancing cavity, intralesional gas, airway displacement/compression, and extension into the danger space. A clear cavity strongly suggests need for drainage.

2) POCUS / Ultrasound — selective adjunct

  • When useful? In children (to reduce radiation), or for guiding aspiration/drainage; not a substitute for CECT when deeper/mediastinal extension or complications are suspected.
  • Quick technical note (transcervical): High-frequency linear probe, patient semi-sitting, sagittal/transverse scan along anterior SCM border. Look for a hypoechoic collection posterior to the pharyngeal wall with rim enhancement/membrane; attempt gentle compression — abscess is non-compressible vs. phlegmon.

3) MRI (when needed)

  • When? If higher tissue resolution is desired (abscess vs. phlegmon, fascial plane extension, suspicion of vertebral/cord involvement, vascular complications), or to reduce radiation in children at centers with rapid emergency protocols (5-min: T2 Dixon + DWI).
  • Recent studies show excellent accuracy for short MRI protocols without contrast; advantageous over CECT for content and extent differentiation, but less available in emergencies.

Antimicrobial Protocol

Start IV antibiotics after drawing blood cultures whenever possible — but do not delay if airway stabilization is urgent.

Children

  • First-line:
    • Cefotaxime IV: 30–50 mg/kg q8h (max 6 g/day).
    • Metronidazole IV: 7.5–13 mg/kg q8h (max 500 mg TID, daily max 4 g).
    • Alternative to metronidazole: Clindamycin IV: 7 mg/kg q8h (max 1.8 g/day).
  • Second-line:
    • Piperacillin/Tazobactam IV: <12 yrs: 80 mg/kg q6h (up to 4 × 4 g).

Adults

  • First-line:
    • Cefotaxime IV: 2 g q8h
    • Metronidazole IV: 500 mg q8h
    • Alternative to metronidazole: Clindamycin IV: 600 mg q8h
  • Second-line:
    • Piperacillin/Tazobactam IV: 4 g q6–8h

Penicillin allergy: Use Cefotaxime + (Metronidazole or Clindamycin) as above depending on clinical scenario.

Additional option: In areas with high MRSA prevalence or severe odontogenic source, consider adding temporary MRSA coverage (e.g., Vancomycin) per Infectious Diseases and hospital microbiology guidance.


Surgical Drainage — When?

Clinical/radiological indicators for early drainage:

  • No improvement within 24–48 h of conservative therapy.
  • Airway compromise or septic toxicity.
  • CECT: clear cavity + rim enhancement/gas, or large diameter (~2.4–2.5 cm in pediatric studies).

Practical tip: In children, even if below the “size threshold”, drainage is favored when a true cavity exists and clinical improvement is inadequate.

A) Transoral drainage (limited, bulging pharyngeal abscess)

  1. OR setup + suction + hemostatic tools + culture specimen.
  2. Head tilt, dental protection, tongue retraction, visualize retropharyngeal bulge.
  3. 18–21G needle aspiration first to confirm pus.
  4. Small vertical incision at the most prominent point, as midline as possible to avoid carotid sheath.
  5. Gentle widening, suction, irrigation with saline, avoid deep dissection (stay midline to avoid ICA).

B) External cervical approach (large/lateral/mediastinal extension)

  1. Incision parallel to anterior SCM border at abscess level.
  2. Careful dissection to retropharyngeal space protecting carotid sheath.
  3. Open abscess cavity, suction, copious irrigation, insert drain (closed suction).
  4. Document extent and re-evaluate with imaging if needed.

Tips & Tricks

  • Do not lay the patient flat if airway compromised; keep semi-sitting until intubation.
  • POCUS useful to identify best aspiration site and avoid vessels near skin.
  • On CECT: Rim enhancement + gas = higher chance of successful drainage; firm phlegmon usually yields no pus.
  • When to image chest? Any chest pain/dyspnea/high CRP with inferior neck pain → order CECT neck + chest early to rule out mediastinitis and consult thoracic surgery.
  • Emergency MRI (5-min) great option when available to reduce radiation and differentiate abscess vs. phlegmon — but never delay airway/therapy for MRI.

Pitfalls

  • Starting antibiotics without blood cultures when feasible → limits de-escalation later.
  • Aggressive oral exam in a child with threatened airway → may precipitate obstruction.
  • Forgetting possible odontogenic source in adults — seek dental consult if suspected.

Follow-up & Discharge

  • Clinical/lab improvement within 24–48 h, oral intake tolerated, airway stable, follow-up plan in place.
  • Selective imaging re-assessment (not routine) if patient fails to improve or if extension/complications suspected
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