Disseminated melioidosis-challenge to routine antibiotic therapy: a case report.

Publication date: Oct 09, 2024

Melioidosis caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, often referred to as a great mimicker or escapist, evades not only the immune system, but also all manual identification methods in an under-equipped clinical microbiology laboratory due to its tedious identification process. This is a case report of disseminated melioidosis with septic arthritis, misdiagnosed both clinicoradiologically and microbiologically as disseminated tuberculosis or other bacterial infection. A middle-aged Asian diabetic male presented with high-grade fever and breathlessness for 4 days along with left knee and ankle swelling for 40 days. Previous hospitalization records revealed growth of pan-sensitive Acinetobacter spp. from ankle and a chest X-ray suspecting tuberculosis for which antibiotic and antitubercular regimen were initiated. After admission, repeated blood cultures and pus culture (ankle and knee joint) confirmed Burkholderia pseudomallei with VITEK-II automated identification system. Recommended therapy was initiated according to revised Darwin’s guideline, leading to gradual cure of the patient. Misidentification leads to inadequate treatment, as melioidosis medication is different from other bacterial infections. Here initiation of meropenem- and cotrimoxazole-intensive therapy for 4 weeks, and 6-month eradication phase with cotrimoxazole, resulted in gradual recovery of the patient. It took around 21 days of intensive antibiotic therapy to get bacteriological clearance from blood, which signifies the tenacious nature of this infection.

Concepts Keywords
4days Anti-Bacterial Agents
Ankle Anti-Bacterial Agents
Antibiotic Arthritis, Infectious
Fever Burkholderia pseudomallei
Laboratory Darwin’s guideline
Diagnosis, Differential
Diagnostic Errors
Disseminated
Humans
Male
Melioidosis
Melioidosis
Meropenem
Meropenem
Middle Aged
Thienamycins
Thienamycins
Treatment Outcome

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH melioidosis
pathway REACTOME Immune System
disease IDO process
disease MESH septic arthritis
disease MESH tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease MESH bacterial infection
disease MESH breathlessness
disease IDO blood
disease MESH pus
drug DRUGBANK Meropenem
disease MESH infection
disease MESH Diagnostic Errors

Original Article

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