Gas Gangrene of a Prosthetic Hip: CT Imaging Clues, Emergency Diagnosis, and the Hidden Link to Colon Cancer
Gas Gangrene of a Prosthetic Hip: The Rare Imaging Emergency That Revealed Hidden Colon Cancer Introduction A 82-year-old man arrives at the emergency department with severe left hip pain, fever, and rapidly worsening systemic symptoms. Ten years earlier, he underwent total hip arthroplasty. Initial laboratory studies demonstrate leukocytosis and hypotension. Radiographs and CT imaging reveal an alarming finding: gas surrounding the prosthetic hip joint and extending into adjacent soft tissues. What appears initially to be an orthopedic infection ultimately uncovers an unsuspected ascending colon adenocarcinoma. This remarkable clinical scenario illustrates one of the most important lessons in modern medical imaging: sometimes a radiologic finding not only establishes an emergency diagnosis but also reveals a hidden systemic disease. Gas gangrene of a prosthetic hip is exceptionally rare, yet it represents one of the most aggressive musculoskeletal infections encountered in emergency r...