Rhodococcus hoagii: Difference between revisions
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Rhodococcus hoagii
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===Microbiology=== |
===Microbiology=== |
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*Facultative intracellular, non-spore-forming, [[Stain::Gram-positive]], weakly acid-fast [[ |
*Facultative intracellular, non-spore-forming, [[Stain::Gram-positive]], weakly acid-fast [[Shape::coccobacillus]] |
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*Within the family [[Nocardiaceae]] and order [[Actinomycetes]] |
*Within the family [[Nocardiaceae]] and order [[Actinomycetes]] |
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*Obligate aerobic and facultatively intracellular |
*Obligate aerobic and facultatively intracellular |
Revision as of 15:11, 8 October 2020
Background
Microbiology
- Facultative intracellular, non-spore-forming, Gram-positive, weakly acid-fast coccobacillus
- Within the family Nocardiaceae and order Actinomycetes
- Obligate aerobic and facultatively intracellular
- Found in dry and dusty soil
- Makes red pigment, hence the name
Epidemiology
- Infects domesticated animals: Horses (and in foals it causes pneumonia), Goats, Pigs, Sheep, and Cattle
- Most commonly infects people with cell-mediated immunodeficiency, particularly HIV, with or without a notable infectious exposure
Risk Factors
- HIV accounts for 65% of cases
- Solid organ and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- Diabetes
- Alcohol abuse
- Chronic renal failure
- Leukemia, lymphoma, lung cancer
- Sarcoidosis
- Preterm infants
Clinical Manifestations
- Necrotizing pneumonia is usual presentation, as well as nodules, cavitation, pleural effusion, and lung abscess
- Typically subacute onset with fever, cough, and fatigue, as well as pleuritic chest pain
- Specifically in immunocompromised patients, it can cause a cavitary lung disease and is on the differential with mycobacteria and nocardiosis
- Extrapulmonary disease can occur with or without pulmonary involvement
- In conjunction with other infections, can have abscesses in liver, spleen, thyroid, kidney, psoas, bone, prostate, intraabdominal cavity, and paraspinous tissue
- Extrapulmonary disease without pulmonary involvement has three main presentations:
- Localized infection following traumatic inoculation, causing wound infection, traumatic septic arthritis, or endophthalmitis
- Isolated bacteremia with fever, typically recently after chemotherapy causing neutropenia
- Gastrointestional inoculation followed by lymphatic dissemination, causing peritonitis, pelvic masses, and mesenteric adenitis
- Others include otitis media with mastoiditis, colonic polyp infection, and osteomyelitis
Management
- Treatment usually 6 months or longer