| Literature DB >> 33951772 |
Kristina Nadrah1, Urška Glinšek Biškup2, Vesna Cvitković Špik2, Manica Müller Premru2, Barbara Šoba2.
Abstract
Bacteremia induced by wound myiasis is uncommon and therefore rarely suspected by clinicians when treating patients with neglected wounds. We present a case of Ignatzschineria larvae bacteremia as a complication of Lucilia sp. maggot wound myiasis in a young male migrant. This is the first reported human case of Ignatzschineria bacteremia in Slovenia and one of the 2 described in the literature where the fly larvae infesting the wounds of the patient with Ignatzschineria bacteremia were not only suspected to be Lucilia sp. but also entomologically identified.Entities:
Keywords: Ignatzschineria larvae; Lucilia sp.; bacteremia; migrant; myiasis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33951772 PMCID: PMC8106986 DOI: 10.3347/kjp.2021.59.2.159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Parasitol ISSN: 0023-4001 Impact factor: 1.341
Fig. 1Lucilia sp. 3rd instar larva from our patient. (A) Thoracic segment spines. (B) Posterior spiracles with 3 distinct straight slits surrounded by a complete closed peritremal ring with one internal projection between the outer and middle slits; the spines and the posterior spiracles were photographed using a Nikon Eclipse E600 (Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) microscope and DS-Fi1 (Nikon) camera. (C) Posterior spiracles located on the face of the terminal segment.
Fig. 2Ignatzschineria larvae from pure bacterial culture: Gram stain.
Fig. 3Culture of Ignatzschineria larvae grown on (A) Columbia agar and (B) chocolate agar after 18-hour incubation.
Fig. 4Neighbour-Joining phylogenetic tree based on nearly full-length 16S rRNA gene sequence of Ignatzschineria larvae isolate BM1043 from our patient (in boldface) and representative Ignatzschineria sp. sequences retrieved from GenBank. The tree was created with MEGA 7.0 software using the Neighbour-Joining method and Jukes–Cantor model. Values on branches are percentage bootstrap values using 1,000 replicates. Wohlfahrtiimonas chitiniclastica was included as an outgroup organism.