| Literature DB >> 25671096 |
Stephanie Ming Young1, Gopal Lingam1, Paul Anantharajah Tambyah2.
Abstract
Elizabethkingia meningoseptica is a nosocomial non-fermenting gram-negative bacillus that has an increasing prevalence in health care settings, especially in intensive care environments. While it has long been recognized as a rare but serious cause of neonatal meningitis and sepsis, its role as a cause of ocular pathology is not well-known. We report the first case of E. meningoseptica endogenous endophthalmitis caused by bacteraemia by the same organism. In view of its aggressiveness and virulence in the eye, and the high rate of misdiagnosis or missed diagnosis of endogenous endophthalmitis especially given its low incidence, we may wish to consider screening all cases of E. menigoseptica bloodstream infections for endophthalmitis in future, similar to how it has become routine to refer all patients with Klebsiella bacteraemia to ophthalmologists for screening for endophthalmitis in our local hospitals.Entities:
Keywords: Elizabethkingia meningoseptica; Endogenous endophthalmitis; Infections of the eye
Year: 2014 PMID: 25671096 PMCID: PMC4322812 DOI: 10.1186/2047-2994-3-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Resist Infect Control ISSN: 2047-2994 Impact factor: 4.887
Summary of outbreaks of
| Period of outbreak | Type of unit | Population involved | Source of outbreak | Control measures | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| April to October 2002 [ | Neonatal intensive care unit | 4 neonates | Not found | Controlled by reinforcement of usual measures | No additional colonization/infection confirmed for >1 year after last case |
| July 2006 and January 2007 [ | Neonatal intensive care unit and pediatric wards | 8 newborns and 5 older children | Hand cultures obtained from a senior resident; Environmental cultures obtained from powdered infant formula, an electrical button, a computer keyboard, phone, a doorknob, and an Ambu bag | Staff exchange in wards restricted; All units thoroughly scrubbed using 2 disinfectants 3 times a day until outbreak controlled; Contact precautions. | Nine patients improved on antimicrobial treatment, and 4 premature infants died after infection. |
| December 2007 through April 2008 [ | Long-term acute care hospital | 19 patients with respiratory failure on mechanical ventilation | Environmental sampling: one swab out of 106 surfaces; Patient sampling: | Training on handwashing and disinfection practices, isolation policies, use of gowns and gloves, policies implemented regarding proper disposal of body fluids | Eight out of 19 died |
| Fall, 2006 [ | Orthopaedic wards | 2 patients who had allograft-associated surgical site infections |
| All clean-room sink drains and traps at processing facility replaced, check valves in drains installed, routine sanitization of drains started, | Tissue-processing resumed following these changes; sterility failure rates returned to baseline levels with no identification of E. meningoseptica or other waterborne gram-negative bacteria |
| August and September 2012 [ | Intensive care units (ICUs). | 5 patients | E. meningoseptica was isolated from from aerators, hand hygiene sinks | Urgent education programme instituted; Taps were cleaned systematically and aerators were changed. | Temporary reduction in case numbers achieved. |