
A 12-year-old male with a history of autism spectrum disorder and chronic sinusitis presented for forehead swelling. His mother reported that she noticed progressive forehead swelling for about one month. She had followed up with the patient’s pediatrician and ENT and was given oral cephalexin and fluticasone nasal spray which did not make any changes in his symptoms. The patient denied any fevers or headaches.
Vitals: Temp 97.4°F; BP 100/58; HR 90; RR 18; SpO2 98%. General: Patient is comfortable appearing, in no acute distress. ENT: 3×3 cm area of fluctuance centrally located over the forehead with no drainage or surrounding erythema that is minimally tender to palpation. No nasal drainage. Neuro: Intact with no deficits. WBC: 14.35 ESR: 23 mm/h CRP: 0.74 mg/dL CT demonstrates osteomyelitis of the frontal bone with osseous destruction with a 5 cm bifrontal complex loculated anterior epidural abscess as well as a 3 cm midline frontal subgaleal extracranial scalp abscess. Findings are consistent with Pott’s Puffy Tumor.Take-Home Points
Copyright
Images and cases from the Society of Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) Clinical Images Exhibit at the 2023 SAEM Annual Meeting | Copyrighted by SAEM 2023 – all rights reserved. View other cases from this Clinical Image Series on ALiEM.

Edward Guo, MD
Cooper University Healthcare

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Rahul Gupta, MD
Cooper University Healthcare
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Ernika Quimby, MD
Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine
Cooper University Healthcare
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- SAEM Clinical Images Series: Pediatric Forehead Swelling - December 16, 2024


