University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN, USA.
Ann Pharmacother. 2013 Nov;47(11):1584-7. doi: 10.1177/1060028013500942. Epub 2013 Nov 4.
To report the first case of Rhizobium radiobacter bacteremia in a critically ill trauma patient.
A 36-year-old female trauma patient hospitalized at The Regional Medical Center at Memphis developed bacteremia due to Rhizobium radiobacter on hospital day 9. The central line catheter tip culture from the same hospital day was negative. No source for the R radiobacter bacteremia was identified. Empirical and definitive antibiotic therapy consisted of cefepime 2 g intravenously every 8 hours for at total of 8 days. On completion of antibiotics, the patient demonstrated clinical resolution by immediate defervescence and gradual normalization of her white blood cell count. She demonstrated microbiologic success of therapy with negative blood cultures on hospital days 22, 34, 45, and 61. She was discharged on hospital day 80.
Rhizobium species are common soil and plant pathogens that rarely cause infections in humans. Previous reports of Rhizobium infections have been in immunocompromised patients; generally those with cancer or HIV infection. Intravenous catheters have commonly been cited as the source of infection. The trauma patient in this case constitutes a unique presentation of R radiobacter bacteremia when compared with other case reports. Her indwelling catheter was not the source of her infection, and her only identifiable risk factor for R radiobacter infection was hospitalization. However, she did possess potential reasons for development of an infection with an unusual organism such as R radiobacter. Potential immune modulating therapies included blood transfusions, opioid analgesics, benzodiazepines, general anesthetics, and surgical procedures. Finally, trauma itself has been associated with some degree of immunosuppression. All these issues may have placed the patient in this case at risk of an opportunistic infection like R radiobacter.
Based on this case, R radiobacter may be considered a potential pathogen causing bacteremia in critically ill trauma patients.
报告首例危重症创伤患者感染放射形土壤杆菌菌血症。
一名 36 岁女性创伤患者因放射形土壤杆菌菌血症于入院第 9 天入住孟菲斯地区医疗中心。同日的中心静脉导管尖端培养结果为阴性。未确定放射形土壤杆菌菌血症的感染源。经验性和明确的抗生素治疗包括头孢吡肟 2 g 每 8 小时静脉注射,共 8 天。抗生素治疗完成后,患者立即退热,白细胞计数逐渐恢复正常,临床症状得到缓解。她在入院第 22、34、45 和 61 天的血培养均为阴性,证明治疗取得了微生物学上的成功。她于入院第 80 天出院。
根瘤菌属是常见的土壤和植物病原体,很少引起人类感染。以前关于根瘤菌感染的报告发生在免疫功能低下的患者中,一般是癌症或 HIV 感染患者。静脉导管常被认为是感染源。与其他病例报告相比,本例创伤患者的放射形土壤杆菌菌血症表现独特。她的留置导管不是感染的来源,她唯一可识别的放射形土壤杆菌感染风险因素是住院。然而,她确实存在因免疫调节治疗、阿片类镇痛药、苯二氮䓬类药物、全身麻醉和手术等因素而感染不常见病原体(如放射形土壤杆菌)的潜在原因。此外,创伤本身也与一定程度的免疫抑制有关。所有这些问题可能使该患者处于感染放射形土壤杆菌等机会性感染的风险之中。
基于本例患者,放射形土壤杆菌可能被视为导致危重症创伤患者菌血症的潜在病原体。