Intra-Abdominal Nocardiosis—Case Report and Review of the Literature

Nocardiosis is primarily an opportunistic infection affecting immunosuppressed individuals, in whom it most commonly presents as pulmonary infection and sometimes cerebral abscesses. Isolated abdominal or retroperitoneal nocardiosis is rare. Here, we report the second case, to our knowledge, of isol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical medicine 2020-07, Vol.9 (7), p.2141
Hauptverfasser: Tramèr, Lucas, Mertz, Kirsten D., Huegli, Rolf, Hinic, Vladimira, Jost, Lorenz, Burkhalter, Felix, Wirz, Sebastian, Tarr, Philip E.
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container_end_page
container_issue 7
container_start_page 2141
container_title Journal of clinical medicine
container_volume 9
creator Tramèr, Lucas
Mertz, Kirsten D.
Huegli, Rolf
Hinic, Vladimira
Jost, Lorenz
Burkhalter, Felix
Wirz, Sebastian
Tarr, Philip E.
description Nocardiosis is primarily an opportunistic infection affecting immunosuppressed individuals, in whom it most commonly presents as pulmonary infection and sometimes cerebral abscesses. Isolated abdominal or retroperitoneal nocardiosis is rare. Here, we report the second case, to our knowledge, of isolated abdominal nocardiosis due to Nocardia paucivorans and provide a comprehensive review of intra-abdominal nocardiosis. The acquisition of abdominal nocardiosis is believed to occur via hematogenous spreading after pulmonary or percutaneous inoculation or possibly via direct abdominal inoculation. Cases of Nocardia peritonitis have been reported in patients on peritoneal dialysis. Accurate diagnosis of abdominal nocardiosis requires histological and/or microbiological examination of appropriate, radiologically or surgically obtained biopsy specimens. Malignancy may initially be suspected when the patient presents with an abdominal mass. Successful therapy usually includes either percutaneous or surgical abscess drainage plus prolonged combination antimicrobial therapy.
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source PubMed Central Open Access; MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Abdomen
Abscesses
Antibiotics
Biopsy
Blood
Case reports
Clinical medicine
German language
Immunocompetence
Infections
Lymphoma
Pain
Patients
Peritoneal dialysis
Peritonitis
Review
Ribosomal DNA
Sweating
title Intra-Abdominal Nocardiosis—Case Report and Review of the Literature
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