14 research outputs found

    Neonatal meningitis and recurrent bacteremia with group B Streptococcus transmitted by own mother’s milk: A case report and review of previous cases

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    This article reports a case of neonatal meningitis and recurrent bacteremia caused by group B Streptococcus (GBS) transmitted via the mother’s milk. A 3-day-old neonate suffered early-onset meningitis due to GBS, from which he recovered after antibiotic treatment for 4 weeks. GBS was not detected in the vaginal or stool cultures of the neonate’s mother before delivery. However, 4 days after treatment of GBS meningitis, the neonate developed GBS bacteremia. As the mother repeatedly showed signs of mastitis after the delivery, bacterial culture tests were performed on her breast milk, in addition to vaginal and stool culture tests. GBS was exclusively detected in the mother’s breast milk. The GBS strains detected in the cerebrospinal fluid of the neonate and the mother’s breast milk were both serotype III, and were confirmed to be identical through pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis. As horizontal GBS transmission between the mother and neonate was indicated, breastfeeding was ceased and replaced with formula milk. No recurrence of bacterial meningitis or bacteremia due to GBS was observed thereafter. Physicians need to consider culturing breast milk in cases of recurrent neonatal GBS infections, even in mothers without prior detection of GBS in conventional vaginal or stool cultures before delivery. Keywords: Group B Streptococcus, Meningitis, Mastitis, Breast mil

    A case of typhoidal tularemia in a male Japanese farmer

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    In Japan, most tularemia cases occur after contact with hares (hunting, cooking) and involve the glandular or ulceroglandular form. Here, we present a case of typhoidal tularemia in a 72-year-old Japanese male farmer who presented with fever, fatigue, and right lower abdominal pain. Computed tomography revealed intestinal wall thickening at the ascending colon, pleural effusion, and ascites. Following an initial diagnosis of bacterial enteric infection, his symptoms deteriorated after a week-long cephalosporin treatment course. The patient lived in an area endemic for scrub typhus; the antibiotic was changed to a tetracycline on suspicion of scrub typhus infection. His symptoms rapidly improved after initiation of minocycline treatment. Later, blood tests revealed marked increases in serological tests against Francisella tularensis exclusively, and the patient was diagnosed with typhoidal tularemia. Typhoidal tularemia may be characterized by any combination of general symptoms, but does not exhibit the local manifestations associated with other forms of tularemia. The patient, in this case, had no direct contact with hares or other wild animals and did not present with local manifestations of tularemia. Physicians should consider this disease, especially when tick-borne disease is suspected in the absence of local wounds, eschar, ulcers, or lymphadenopathy

    Severe epidemic myalgia with an elevated level of serum interleukin-6 caused by human parechovirus type 3: a case report and brief review of the literature

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    Abstract Background Human parechovirus type 3 (HPeV-3) is known to cause cold-like symptoms, diarrhea, or severe infections such as sepsis in infants and children. In adults, HPeV-3 infection is rarely diagnosed because the symptoms are generally mild and self-limiting; however, this infection has been linked to epidemic myalgia, regardless of the presence of underlying diseases, immunosuppression, or sex. Case presentation We describe an adult case of severe systemic myalgia and orchiodynia after infection with HPeV-3, which was transmitted from the child of the patient. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) level was found to be elevated in the patient’s serum. Conclusion Severe myalgia associated with HPeV-3 infection is potentially caused by an elevated serum level of IL-6

    Expression of activation-induced cytidine deaminase enhances the clearance of pneumococcal pneumonia : evidence of a subpopulation of protective anti-pneumococcal B1a cells

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    We describe a protective early acquired immune response to pneumococcal pneumonia that is mediated by a subset of B1a cells. Mice deficient in B1 cells (xid), or activation‐induced cytidine deaminase (AID (−/−)), or invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells (Jα18 (−/−)), or interleukin‐13 (IL‐13 (−/−)) had impaired early clearance of pneumococci in the lung, compared with wild‐type mice. In contrast, AID (−/−) mice adoptively transferred with AID (+/+) B1a cells, significantly cleared bacteria from the lungs as early as 3 days post infection. We show that this early bacterial clearance corresponds to an allergic contact sensitivity‐like cutaneous response, probably due to a subpopulation of initiating B1a cells. In the pneumonia model, these B1a cells were found to secrete higher affinity antigen‐specific IgM. In addition, as in contact sensitivity, iNKT cells were required for the anti‐pneumococcal B1a cell initiating response, probably through early production of IL‐13, given that IL‐13 (−/−) mice also failed to clear infection. Our study is the first to demonstrate the importance of AID in generating an appropriate B1a cell response to pathogenic bacteria. Given the antibody affinity and pneumonia resistance data, natural IgM produced by conventional B1a cells are not responsible for pneumonia clearance compared with the AID‐dependent subset

    Outbreaks of Multidrug-Resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa in Community Hospitals in Japan

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    We previously reported an outbreak in a neurosurgery ward of catheter-associated urinary tract infection with multidrug-resistant (MDR) Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain IMCJ2.S1, carrying the 6′-N-aminoglycoside acetyltransferase gene [aac(6′)-Iae]. For further epidemiologic studies, 214 clinical isolates of MDR P. aeruginosa showing resistance to imipenem (MIC ≥ 16 μg/ml), amikacin (MIC ≥ 64 μg/ml), and ciprofloxacin (MIC ≥ 4 μg/ml) were collected from 13 hospitals in the same prefecture in Japan. We also collected 70 clinical isolates of P. aeruginosa that were sensitive to one or more of these antibiotics and compared their characteristics with those of the MDR P. aeruginosa isolates. Of the 214 MDR P. aeruginosa isolates, 212 (99%) were serotype O11. We developed a loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) assay and a slide agglutination test for detection of the aac(6′)-Iae gene and the AAC(6′)-Iae protein, respectively. Of the 212 MDR P. aeruginosa isolates, 212 (100%) and 207 (98%) were positive in the LAMP assay and in the agglutination test, respectively. Mutations of gyrA and parC genes resulting in amino acid substitutions were detected in 213 of the 214 MDR P. aeruginosa isolates (99%). Of the 214 MDR P. aeruginosa isolates, 212 showed pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns with ≥70% similarity to that of IMCJ2.S1 and 83 showed a pattern identical to that of IMCJ2.S1, indicating that clonal expansion of MDR P. aeruginosa occurred in community hospitals in this area. The methods developed in this study to detect aac(6′)-Iae were rapid and effective in diagnosing infections caused by various MDR P. aeruginosa clones
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