| Literature DB >> 35573023 |
Wincy Wing-Sze Ng1, Hoi-Ping Shum1, Kelvin Kai-Wang To2, Siddharth Sridhar2.
Abstract
Background: Shewanella species are emerging pathogens that can cause severe hepatobiliary, skin and soft tissue, gastrointestinal, respiratory infections, and bacteremia. Here we reported the largest case series of infections caused by Shewanella species. Aim: To identify the clinical features and risk factors predisposing to Shewanella infections. To evaluate resistance pattern of Shewanella species and appropriateness of antibiotic use in the study cohort.Entities:
Keywords: Shewanella algae; Shewanella infection; Shewanella putrefaciens; Shewanella species; gram negative bacilli
Year: 2022 PMID: 35573023 PMCID: PMC9100594 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.850938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Clinical characteristics of Shewanella-associated sepsis.
| Clinical characteristics ( | |
| Gender | Male ( |
| Female ( | |
| M:F ratio (1.6:1) | |
| Age | 78 (65–87) |
| Underlying conditions | Hepatobiliary disease ( |
| Malignancy ( | |
| Hepatobiliary cancer ( | |
| Cholangiocarcinoma ( | |
| Pancreatic cancer ( | |
| Cancer of ampulla of Vater ( | |
| Cancer of gallbladder ( | |
| Colorectal cancer (n = 7) | |
| Gastric cancer ( | |
| Breast cancer ( | |
| Lymphoma ( | |
| Malignant melanoma ( | |
| Chronic kidney disease/End-stage renal failure ( | |
| Diabetes mellitus ( | |
| Seawater exposure ( | |
| Mortality and morbidity | Hospital death ( |
| Require ICU care ( | |
| ICU Length of stay (4, IQR 2-8) | |
| ICU mortality ( | |
| Hospital mortality ( | |
| APACHE IV risk of death 0.34 (IQR 0.15–0.77) | |
| Clinical manifestations (specimen | |
| Hepatobiliary infections ( | |
| Gallstone or bile duct stone disease ( | |
| Skin and soft tissue infections ( | |
| Chronic wound (DM, chronic venous insufficiency, malignant ulcer) ( | |
| Respiratory infections ( | |
| Gastrointestinal infections ( | |
| Others ( | |
Common organisms involved in co-infection with Shewanella (specimen n = 154).
| No co-infection ( |
| With co-infection ( |
| Enterococcus ( |
| Escherichia Coli ( |
| Klebsiella ( |
| Streptococcus ( |
| Proteus ( |
| Bacteroides ( |
| Clostridium ( |
| Staphylococcus ( |
| Citrobacter ( |
| Enterobacter ( |
| Pseudomonas ( |
| Morganella ( |
| Aeromonas ( |
| Candida ( |
| Acinetobacter ( |
| Vibrio ( |
Antibiotic susceptibility of Shewanella (specimen n =154).
| Ceftazidime ( |
| Gentamicin ( |
| Cefoperazone-sulbactam ( |
| Ciprofloxacin ( |
| Piperacillin ( |
| Imipenem-cilastatin ( |
Cases with marine exposure.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F/58 | None | Pneumonia | Non-fatal drowning | Endotracheal aspirate | Probable |
| 2 | M/71 | None | Traumatic amputation of thumb | Fisherman, thumb laceration by ropes while fishing | Wound swab | Probable |
| 3 | M/59 | None | Post-traumatic wound infection | Fish farm owner, fall with elbow contusion | Wound swab | Probable |
| 4 | M/87 | Diabetes mellitus | Scald wound infection | Recent pipeline damage causing home flooding, poor home hygiene | Wound swab | Probable |
| 5 | M/75 | None | Infected lower limb ulcer | Injury by broken furniture during typhoon with sea water contacted | Wound swab | Probable |
| 6 | M/57 | None | Infected venous ulcer | Self-dressing to venous ulcer with non-sterile tap water | Wound swab | Probable |