Title of article
Ralstonia mannitolilytica-Induced Septicemia and Homology Analysis in Infected Patients: 3 Case Reports
Author/Authors
Liu، Cai-Xia نويسنده Department of Clinical Laboratory, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, China , , Yan، Chun-hua نويسنده , , Zhang، Pan نويسنده Department of Clinical Laboratory, Gongli Hospital, Second Military Medical University, Shanghai, China , , Li، Fang-Qu نويسنده Department of Clinical Laboratory, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, China , , Yang، Jing-Hong نويسنده Department of Clinical Laboratory, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, China , , Li، Xiang-Yang نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی 0 سال 2016
Pages
6
From page
1
To page
6
Abstract
Ralstonia mannitolilytica is an emerging opportunistic pathogen.
Hospital outbreaks of Ralstonia spp. are mainly associated with
contaminated treatment water or auxiliary instruments. In this report,
we summarize the clinical infection characteristics of R.
mannitolilytica, the drug-susceptibility testing of the bacterial
strains, and the results of related infection investigations. We
retrospectively analyzed the clinical information of 3 patients with R.
mannitolilytica. The patients’ primary-onset symptoms were chills and
fever. The disease progressed rapidly and septic shock symptoms
developed. Laboratory tests indicated progressively decreased white
blood cells and platelets, as well as significant increases in certain
inflammation indicators. The effect of treatment with Tazocin was good.
The growth period of R. mannitolilytica in sterile distilled water was
> 6 months. The pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) results
revealed that the infectious strains from these 3 patients were not the
same clonal strain. This bacterium was not detected in the nosocomial
infection samples. Our results suggest that R. mannitolilytica-induced
septicemia had an acute disease onset and rapid progression. The
preferred empirical antibiotic was Tazocin. In these 3 cases, the R.
mannitolilytica-induced septicemia was not due to clonal
transmission.
Journal title
Jundishapur Journal of Microbiology (JJM)
Serial Year
2016
Journal title
Jundishapur Journal of Microbiology (JJM)
Record number
2398940
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