Burkholderia pseudomallei: Difference between revisions
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Burkholderia pseudomallei
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= ''Burkholderia pseudomallei'' (melioidosis) = |
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= Microbiology = |
= Microbiology = |
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Revision as of 01:29, 15 August 2019
Microbiology
- Oxidase positive, indole-negative Gram-negative rod with "safety pin" appearance
- Non-hemolytic
Epidemiology
- Humans and animals
- Important cause of death in SE Asia and northern Australia
- Up to 80% seroprevalence in Thailand, mostly asymptomatic
- Sporadic cases elsewhere
- May have latent disease with reactivation much later
- Acquired by percutaneous inoculation, inhalation (esp. lab workers), and ingestion
- Risk factors for clinical disease
- Diabetes
- Heavy alcohol use
- Chronic lung disease
- Chronic kidney disease
- Treatment with glucocorticoids
- Cancer
- Thalassemia
Clinical Presentation
- Incubation period 9 days (range 1 to 21 days)
- Presentations can vary from asymptomatic, skin ulcers, abscesses, latent infection, chronic pneumonia (similar to TB), or fulminant shock
- Pneumonia (50%)
- GU infection (15%)
- Skin (15%)
- Primary bacteremia (10%)
- Septic arthritis/OM (3-5%)
- Neuro (3-5%)
- About 20% of clinical cases with develop septic shock
Diagnosis
- Culture
- Blood, throat, and urine cultures from all patients with suspected melioidosis
- Grows on blood agar, MacConkey, etc. (i.e. not a fastidious organism)
- Can use selective colistin or polymyxin B
- On sheep blood agar, grows as small, smooth, cream-coloured colony with metallic sheen
- May develop a dry and wrinkled appearance after 1 to 2 days of incubation
- PCR
- Immunofluorescence and latex agglutination
- Serology (acute/convalescent)
Management
- Intrinsic resistance to many antibiotics, especially using efflux pumps
- Ceftazidime
- Amoxicillin-clavulanic acid
- TMP-SMX
Biosafety
- Lab workers can have aerosol exposure
- May need prophylaxis in high-risk patients
- Septra or doxy or amox/clav
- Needs to be sent to CDC via NML