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Dual infection with Acinetobacter baumannii and Klebsiella pneumoniaein a patient with multiple comorbidities – case presentation

Authors :
Oana Săndulescu
Ioana Berciu
Adrian Streinu-Cercel
Monica Andreea Stoica
Anca Streinu-Cercel
Liliana Lucia Preoțescu
Source :
BMC Infectious Diseases
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2014.

Abstract

Case report A 35 year-old male patient presented to our clinic in May 2014 for progressive malaise, low-grade fever and nausea. His medical history revealed chronic glomerulonephritis and renal failure with hemodialysis from 2005 to 2010; kidney transplant in 2010, with transplant rejection and positive CMV-IgM in March 2014. He also presented arterial hypertension, ischemic heart disease and left ventricular hypertrophy since 2010, multiple episodes of sepsis and pneumonia with Klebsiella spp. through digestive microbial translocation (colonic ulcerations), and a double aortocoronary bypass in March 2014. The thoracotomy incision had healed almost completely, but the right calf incision presented signs of infection. His concomitant therapy included anti-hypertensive agents, antiplatelet therapy, ganciclovir, immune-suppression therapy with mycophenolic acid, and prednisone (10 mg/day). On admission, the clinical exam was normal, except for bilateral lower limb edema and inflammation of the right calf incision area, with multiple patches of exposed soft tissue and suppuration. Biologically, he presented pancytopenia (WBC 2,100 cells/μL, hemoglobin 6.8 g/dL, thrombocytes 137,000 cells/μL), nitrogen retention syndrome (urea 147.4 mg/dL, creatinine 4.4 mg/dL). The patient’s reactivity was quite low given the concomitant immune-suppressive treatment, with ESR 38 mm/1h, fibrinogen 351 mg/dL, and CRP 10 mg/L. Urine cultures, repeated blood cultures and procalcitonin were negative, but the smear from the right calf incision wound identified inflammatory cells and Gramnegative coccobacilli, and CLED cultures grew smooth, yellow, lactose-fermenting colonies. Microscan (Siemens, Munich, Germany) identified carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (KPC) and the strain was subcultured and grew a smooth, grey, non-lactose-fermenting colony, identified on VITEK (bioMerieux, Paris, France) as Acinetobacter baumannii. Both strains were resistant to all tested drugs except for colistin and tigecycline. As both strains initially grew in a single isolated culture, with homogenous morphology, it took repeated cultures to separate the two strains. The patient’s evolution was favorable under treatment with tigecycline and local instillations of colistin.

Details

ISSN :
14712334
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4abae455c2b604d334469ec9e1387fb0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-14-s7-p26