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    Human Infection from an Unidentified Erythrocyte-Associated Bacterium

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    Abstract A 49-year-old splenectomized man had an infection from an unidentified, gram-positive, rodshaped bacterium that adhered to the majority of his peripheral-blood erythrocytes. On transmission electron microscopy, the bacterium was seen to be extraerythrocytic and was 0.2 μm wide by 1.0 to 1.7 μm long. It possessed a thick, granular cell wall, a trilamellar membrane external to the cell wall and prominent mesosomes. Attempts to cultivate the organism in vitro or to duplicate the patient\u27s disease in splenectomized animals were unsuccessful. The patient\u27s response suggested that the bacterium was susceptible to cell-wall-active antibiotics and to chloramphenicol but not to tetracycline. This bacterium may be the cause of other chronic, fever-producing, multisystem diseases of unknown origin. (N Engl J Med 301:897–900, 1979

    1982 Selected Bibliography

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