Spectrum of Disease Due to Rapidly Growing Mycobacteria

One hundred twenty-five cases of disease due to rapidly growing mycobacteria were observed over a four-year period. Cutaneous infections accounted for 74 cases (59%). Of these, 40 followed surgical procedures (especially augmentation mammaplasty or median sternotomy), and 34 were due to accidental p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Reviews of infectious diseases 1983-07, Vol.5 (4), p.657-679
Hauptverfasser: Richard J. Wallace, Jr, Jana M. Swenson, Vella A. Silcox, Good, Robert C., Jaime A. Tschen, Mary Seabury Stone
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container_end_page 679
container_issue 4
container_start_page 657
container_title Reviews of infectious diseases
container_volume 5
creator Richard J. Wallace, Jr
Jana M. Swenson
Vella A. Silcox
Good, Robert C.
Jaime A. Tschen
Mary Seabury Stone
description One hundred twenty-five cases of disease due to rapidly growing mycobacteria were observed over a four-year period. Cutaneous infections accounted for 74 cases (59%). Of these, 40 followed surgical procedures (especially augmentation mammaplasty or median sternotomy), and 34 were due to accidental penetrating trauma. Among the 24 patients with pulmonary disease, the mean age was ∼60 years, the majority of patients (63%) were women, and most had unilateral noncavitary disease. Other infections included disseminated disease with multiple nodular skin lesions and positive blood cultures, cervical lymphadenitis, keratitis, and endocarditis associated with a prosthetic valve. Infected tissues showed mixed acute and granulomatous inflammation; acid-fast bacilli, when present, occurred in extracellular clumps within microabscesses. Mycobacterium fortuitum and Mycobacterium chelonei were encountered with approximately equal frequency; 80% of isolates of M. chelonei were subspecies abscessus, and 83% of isolates of M. fortuitum were biovariant fortuitum. The outcome in these infections was generally good, although 9% of the patients, including all those with endocarditis, died. Infections due to M. fortuitum and M. chelonei are probably markedly under-diagnosed, and these organiams are capable of causing a wide spectrum of clinical disease.
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Infected tissues showed mixed acute and granulomatous inflammation; acid-fast bacilli, when present, occurred in extracellular clumps within microabscesses. Mycobacterium fortuitum and Mycobacterium chelonei were encountered with approximately equal frequency; 80% of isolates of M. chelonei were subspecies abscessus, and 83% of isolates of M. fortuitum were biovariant fortuitum. The outcome in these infections was generally good, although 9% of the patients, including all those with endocarditis, died. 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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Bacterial diseases
Biological and medical sciences
Biopsies
Blood
Endocarditis
Epidemiology
Female
Fungal diseases
Fungal infections
Human bacterial diseases
Humans
Infections
Infectious diseases
Lung diseases
Lung Diseases - microbiology
Lungs
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Mycobacterium - isolation & purification
Mycobacterium Infections - diagnosis
Mycobacterium Infections - microbiology
Review Articles
Sepsis - microbiology
Skin diseases
Skin Diseases, Infectious - microbiology
Skin Diseases, Infectious - pathology
Surgical Wound Infection - microbiology
Tuberculosis and atypical mycobacterial infections
Wounds and Injuries - microbiology
title Spectrum of Disease Due to Rapidly Growing Mycobacteria
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