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Helicobacter cinaedi-infected aneurysm and vertebral osteomyelitis in an immunocompetent patient

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An 80-year-old immunocompetent man with hypertension and dyslipidemia was referred to our hospital with a 2-day history of loss of appetite and lower back pain. He had a history of… Click to show full abstract

An 80-year-old immunocompetent man with hypertension and dyslipidemia was referred to our hospital with a 2-day history of loss of appetite and lower back pain. He had a history of cerebral infarction, arteriosclerosis obliterans in his left leg, and unstable angina. On physical examination, he was afebrile. Percussion worsened the lower back pain at the L4 level. Computed tomography showed an abdominal aortic aneurysm with surrounding inflammation measuring 30 × 40 mm and consecutive swollen intervertebral disks with vertebral bone destruction at the L4 level (Fig. 1). Aerobic blood cultures (Bactec Fx system) on day 1 in the previous hospital revealed spiral-shaped gram-negative rods on day 4 (Fig. 2). 16 S rRNA gene analysis revealed the organism to be Helicobacter cinaedi. Three sets of blood cultures (BacT/Alert system) on day 1 at our hospital yielded negative results despite no preceding antimicrobial administration. The patient was diagnosed with H. Cinaedi-infective endarteritis and vertebral osteomyelitis and treated with 1 g meropenem 8-hourly and 500 mg levofloxacin daily. The isolates' minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC), determined using the E-test, was >32 μg/mL for levofloxacin. The MICs were high for β-lactams, except meropenem (0.006 μg/mL). Therefore, levofloxacin was discontinued on day 12. The patient underwent extraanatomical reconstruction after confirming the negative conversion of blood culture (Bactec Fx system), and meropenem was continued for 7 weeks. The treatment was successful. He was referred to another hospital for rehabilitation and remained disease-free, without recurrence, during 1 year of follow-up. H. cinaedi is a microaerobic spiral-shaped gram-negative rod that grows as a characteristic swarming thin-film colony [1]. The detection rate of H. cinaedi is higher using the Bactec Fx system than using the BacT/Alert system [2], and the Bactec Fx system should be used if an H. cinaedi infection is suspected. In our case, blood culture results (BacT/Alert system) were negative, despite the prolonged 14-day incubation period. When the BacT/Alert system is used, results can be negative despite sufficient growth of H. cinaedi [2]. Therefore, we performed subcultivation after 1 and 2 weeks of incubation; however, no isolate was observed on blood agar under microaerobic conditions at 35 °C for 4 days. Most H. cinaedi infections occur in immunocompromised hosts [1]. Infected aneurysms or vertebral osteomyelitis are the most common manifestations among immunocompetent individuals with arteriosclerosis [3,4]. Clinicians should consider H. cinaedi if appropriate cultures reveal spiralshaped gram-negative rods in patients with an infected aneurysm or vertebral osteomyelitis, even in immunocompetent individuals.

Keywords: system; bactec system; day; cinaedi; vertebral osteomyelitis

Journal Title: IDCases
Year Published: 2022

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