| Literature DB >> 31010322 |
Romina Maria Rösch1, Katja Buschmann1, Lena Brendel1, Thomas Schwanz1, Christian-Friedrich Vahl1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lactococcus garvieae (LG) is a gram-positive coccus known to be a major pathogen in aqua farming, which is responsible for severe outbreaks. Its incidence in humans is extremely rare. Prior to 1985, all bacteria in the genus Lactococcus were included in the Streptococcus genus. The first human infection was documented in 1991, and since then, the relevance and clinical significance in humans has increased. CASE DESCRIPTION: We present the clinical course of an LG endocarditis in a 78-year-old man who had a history of exertional dyspnea. The patient's blood tests showed increased inflammation values, and a transesophageal ultrasound (TEE) showed a stenosis of the prosthetic aortic valve. Blood cultures were positive for LG, leading to a diagnosis of infective endocarditis. After 6 weeks of intravenous antibiotics and a prosthetic aortic valve replacement, the patient made a good recovery. REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE: After the first documented case in 1991 to 2018, 25 cases of LG endocarditis have been described in PubMed and MEDLINE. We reviewed all reported cases of LG endocarditis, commenting on predisposing risk factors, the course and outcome of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: infections; heart valve prosthesis; infective endocarditis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31010322 PMCID: PMC6480988 DOI: 10.1177/2324709619832052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Investig Med High Impact Case Rep ISSN: 2324-7096
Figure 1.(A) Growth of colonies of Lactococcus garvieae on a blood agar plate after 48 hours of incubation in aerobic conditions. (B) Gram stain of Lactococcus garvieae with clusters and short chains of gram-positive cocci.
Figure 2.Timeline of patient’s medical history.
Table of LG endocarditis cases described in the literature (incidence, demographics, type, risk factors, antibiotics, surgery, outcome).
| Reference | Acquired Infection Location | Sex/Age | Type | Risk Factors | Antibiotics | Surgery | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Navas et al[ | USA | Male/64 | NAV | VAN | Yes | Survival | |
| Ortiz et al[ | Spain | Female/70 | NMV | AMX + GEN | Yes | Survival | |
| Ortiz et al[ | Spain | Female/77 | NMV/NAV | GD | AMX + GEN | No | Death |
| Backes et al[ | Holland | Female/68 | NAV | GD | No | Survival | |
| Zuily et al[ | France | Female/64 | PMV | RF/GD | AMX + GEN | No | Survival |
| Heras et al[ | Spain | Male/68 | NMV | GEN + AMP + CTX | Yes | Death | |
| Watanabe et al[ | Japan | Female/55 | NMV | PEN + GEN, CTX + GEN | No | Survival | |
| Li et al[ | China | Male/41 | NMV | PEN + GEN | Yes | Survival | |
| Clavero et al[ | Chile | Female/72 | NMV | RF | AMP + CLX, VAN + GEN | No | Death |
| Rasmussen et al[ | Sweden | Male/81 | PAV/NMV | GD | PEN + TOB | No | Survival |
| Bazemore et al[ | USA | Male/45 | PAV | GD | VAN + Pip/Taz, CTX + GEN | Yes | Survival |
| James et al[ | UK | Female/56 | PAV | VAN | No | Survival | |
| Tsur et al[ | Israel | Male/76 | PAV | GD | CTX + GEN | No | Survival |
| Russo et al[ | Italy | Male/63 | PAV/NMV | GD | VAN + GEN, AMP + GEN | No | Survival |
| Hirakawa et al[ | Brazil | Female/58 | PMV | RF | VAN | No | Survival |
| Suh et al[ | Korea | Female/75 | PMV | RF | CTX + GEN + RI, TEI + CTX | Yes | Survival |
| Wilbring et al[ | Germany | Male/55 | PTV | VAN + GEN, AMX + LEV | No | Survival | |
| Landeloos et al[ | Belgium | Female/82 | PMV | GD | AMX, PEN + GEN | No | Survival |
| Lim and Jenkins[ | UK | Male/57 | NMV | GD | AMX + GEN | Yes | Survival |
| Wang et al[ | China | Male/72 | NMV | RF/GD | PEN + GEN | No | Survival |
| Fleming et al[ | Korea | Male/68 | PAV/NMV | RF/GD | VAN | No | Death |
| Fihman et al[ | France | Female/86 | PAV | GD | AMX + GEN | No | Survival |
| Vinh et al[ | Canada | Male/80 | NAV | GD | AMP | Yes | Survival |
| Yiu et al[ | China | Male/67 | NMV | AMP | Yes | Survival | |
| Fefer et al[ | USA | Female/84 | NMV/PAV | CTX | Yes | Death |
Abbreviations: NAV, native aortic valve; VAN, vancomycin; NMV, native mitral valve; AMX, amoxicillin; GEN, gentamicin; GD, gastrointestinal disorder; PMV, prosthetic mitral valve; RF, raw fish; AMP, ampicillin; CTX, ceftriaxone; CLX, cloxacillin; PAV, prosthetic aortic valve; PEN, penicillin; TOB, tobramycin; Pip/Taz, piperacillin/tazobactam; RI, rifampicin; TEI, teicoplanin; PTV, prosthetic tricuspid valve; LEV, levofloxacin.[1,6,8,12,13,17,18,21,22,25-39]
Microbiological Findings: Susceptibility Testing of Lactococcus garvieae.
| Antibiotic | MIC (mg/L) | MIC Interpretation[ |
|---|---|---|
| Penicillin | 0.25 | S |
| Ampicillin | 0.5 | S |
| Ceftriaxone | 0.25 | S |
| Cefotaxime | 0.25 | S |
| Gentamicin | 6 | S |
| Clindamycin | >1.0 | R |
| Vancomycin | 1.0 | S |
Abbreviations: MIC, minimal inhibitory concentration; S, sensitive; R, resistant.
Because of the lack of standardized susceptibility testing, the MIC interpretation is of orienting character only.