Aeromonas
From IDWiki
Aeromonas
Background
Microbiology
- Gram-negative bacillus
- Motile, oxidase positive, catalase positive, nitrate positive, urease negative, glucose fermenting
- Four species of greatest importance to human health include Aeromonas caviae, Aeromonas dhakensis, Aeromonas veronii, and Aeromonas hydrophila
- Aeromonas salmonicida causes disease in fish, with case reports in humans
Epidemiology
- Live in water environments worldwide (including freshwater, saltwater, and wastewater), but also soil, plants, food, animals
- Generally consider opportunistic pathogens
Clinical Manifestations
- Classically, causes skin and soft tissue infections following freshwater exposure or injury
- Also, gastroenteritis and/or colitis, with nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, and fever
- Bacteremia, with a mortality of about 30%, more common in malignancy, hepatobiliary disease, and diabetes mellitus
- Also reports of respiratory infections, urinary tract infections, and SBP
Management
- Generally susceptible to aminoglycosides, piperacillin, third-generation cephalosporins, carbapenems, azithromycin, nitrofurantoin, quinolones, tetracyclines
- Often susceptible to cotrimoxazole
- Not reliably susceptible to penicillins (except piperacillin), clarithromycin, or first- and second-generation cephalosporins
- Increasingly resistant to beta-lactam antibiotics, with inducible chromosomal beta-lactamases
Further Reading
- The genus Aeromonas: taxonomy, pathogenicity, and infection. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2010 Jan;23(1):35-73. doi: 10.1128/CMR.00039-09. PMID: 20065325; PMCID: PMC2806660.