Purulent Pericarditis After Esophageal Erosion With Streptococcus intermedius and Lactobacillus spp
Division
West Florida
Hospital
Largo Medical Center
Document Type
Case Report
Publication Date
6-12-2026
Keywords
Lactobacillus, Streptococcus intermedius (Streptococcus anginosus group), cardiac tamponade, contiguous spread, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, pericardial effusion, pericardial window, pericardiocentesis, polymicrobial infection, purulent pericarditis
Disciplines
Bacterial Infections and Mycoses | Cardiovascular Diseases | Internal Medicine | Medicine and Health Sciences | Neoplasms
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Purulent pericarditis is rare but rapidly fatal without urgent drainage and targeted antibiotics; malignancy-related effusions should not be presumed malignant when an anatomic breach is possible.
CASE PRESENTATION: A 67-year-old male with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma presented with pleuritic chest pain. Electrocardiogram showed diffuse ST elevation; transthoracic echocardiography revealed a large effusion with fibrinous strands and mild right-ventricle diastolic collapse. Computed tomography angiography demonstrated tumor erosion into the left main bronchus. The patient received vancomycin/piperacillin-tazobactam and underwent emergent pericardiocentesis yielding ∼800 mL of cloudy fluid (49,710 cells/μL, glucose 2 mg/dL, lactate dehydrogenase 7,327 U/L; neutrophil predominant; cytology negative; blood cultures returned negative). Cultures grew Streptococcus intermedius and Lactobacillus spp; antibiotics were narrowed to intravenous ceftriaxone for 3 weeks. Persistent tamponade necessitated pericardial window placement on hospital day 4; follow-up echocardiography demonstrated improved effusion with pericardial thickening/calcification.
DISCUSSION: In malignancy, diffuse ST elevation and highly inflammatory fluid should prompt evaluation for purulence and an anatomic breach rather than anchoring on malignant effusion.
TAKE-HOME MESSAGE: In cancer patients with pericardial effusion, oral/gastrointestinal flora in pericardial cultures should trigger evaluation for an anatomic breach (eg, tumor erosion) and early source control with drainage, culture-directed antibiotics, and surgical escalation when tamponade continues to persist.
Publisher or Conference
JACC Case Reports
Recommended Citation
Madishetty V, Yaylayan A, Handa A, Colafranceschi A, Halleman C. Purulent Pericarditis After Esophageal Erosion With Streptococcus intermedius and Lactobacillus spp. JACC Case Rep. Published online June 12, 2026. doi:10.1016/j.jaccas.2026.108869