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Case Reports
. 2017 Nov;131(11):1026-1029.
doi: 10.1017/S0022215117001748. Epub 2017 Aug 15.

Clavicle fracture with osteomyelitis after neck dissection and post-operative radiotherapy: case report

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Case Reports

Clavicle fracture with osteomyelitis after neck dissection and post-operative radiotherapy: case report

R Shodo et al. J Laryngol Otol. 2017 Nov.

Abstract

Background: Non-traumatic bone fractures in cancer patients are usually pathological fractures due to bone metastases. In head and neck cancer patients, clavicle stress fractures may occur as a result of atrophy of the trapezius muscle after neck dissection in which the accessory nerve becomes structurally or functionally damaged.

Case report: A 71-year-old man underwent modified radical neck dissection with accessory nerve preservation and post-operative radiotherapy for submandibular lymph node metastases of tongue cancer. Four weeks after the radiotherapy, a clavicle fracture, with osteomyelitis and abscess formation in the pectoralis major muscle, occurred. Unlike in simple stress fracture, long-term antibiotic administration and drainage surgery were required to suppress the inflammation.

Conclusion: As seen in the present patient, clavicle stress fractures may occur even after neck dissection in which the accessory nerve is preserved, and may be complicated by osteomyelitis and abscess formation owing to risk factors such as radiotherapy, tracheostomy and contiguous infection.

Keywords: Clavicle; Neck Dissection; Osteomyelitis; Radiotherapy; Stress Fracture.

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