1. Multidrug-resistant Klebsiella oxytoca ventriculitis, successfully treated with intraventricular tigecycline: A case report.
- Author
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Soto-Hernández JL, Soto-Ramírez A, Pérez-Neri I, Angeles-Morales V, Cárdenas G, and Barradas VA
- Subjects
- Adult, Anti-Bacterial Agents cerebrospinal fluid, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Cerebral Ventriculitis complications, Cerebral Ventriculitis diagnosis, Cerebral Ventriculitis microbiology, Efavirenz, Emtricitabine, Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate Drug Combination therapeutic use, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections drug therapy, Humans, Injections, Intraventricular, Klebsiella Infections complications, Klebsiella Infections diagnosis, Klebsiella Infections microbiology, Klebsiella oxytoca isolation & purification, Klebsiella oxytoca physiology, Male, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Surgical Wound Infection complications, Surgical Wound Infection diagnosis, Surgical Wound Infection microbiology, Tigecycline cerebrospinal fluid, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Cerebral Ventriculitis drug therapy, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Klebsiella Infections drug therapy, Surgical Wound Infection drug therapy, Tigecycline therapeutic use, Ventriculoperitoneal Shunt
- Abstract
A 38-year-old male presented to the hospital with headache, fever, and meningeal signs. He had undergone a surgical review of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt system one month earlier. A head computed tomography scan showed hydrocephalus. His medical history included a human immunodeficiency virus infection identified four years before and resolved cryptococcal meningitis, which had necessitated the implantation of the shunt system. Ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was obtained, which showed inflammation and, in culture, grew a Gram-negative bacillus identified as multidrug-resistant Klebsiella oxytoca. The shunt was removed and a ventricular drain was installed. Treatment with meropenem and amikacin was established without a response; the CSF white blood cell count continued to increase, with cultures remaining positive. The patient's clinical condition deteriorated to stupor. With informed consent, intraventricular (ITV) treatment with tigecycline was initiated at a dose of 5 mg every 24 h and, three days later, the CSF cultures were negativized. Tigecycline levels in the CSF were quantified by liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection and showed peak concentrations achieved at two hours after the dose of between 178 and 310 μg/mL. After 11 days of treatment with ITV tigecycline and eight negative CSF cultures, a new CSF shunt was installed. During follow-up review 10 months later, the patient reported he was working. The dose of tigecycline used in this study produced levels 15 to 20 times the minimum inhibitory concentration of the bacteria for up to six hours with adequate tolerance., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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