Bacteremia and Skin Infections in Four Patients Caused by Helicobacter-Like Organisms

  • Pérez-Santiago J
  • Ramirez-Gaona M
  • Holm-Kennedy R
  • et al.
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Enterohepatic Helicobacter-like organisms (HLO) have been recognized as causes of human infection since 1984, primarily as a cause of bacteremia and cellulitis in immunocompromised individuals, but the spectrum of illness due to HLO has expanded based on numerous reports from Japan. METHODS: We report 4 epidemiologically unrelated immunocompetent patients with HLO bacteremia diagnosed within a 2-year period. Three patients had cellulitis and 1 patient had unexplained fever. 16S ribosomal deoxyribonucleic acid (rDNA) sequence analysis of 2 isolates suggested that they were Helicobacter cinaedi, and whole-genome sequencing showed that they differed only slightly from reference strains. CONCLUSIONS: We believe that this syndrome is more common than reported, but it is easily overlooked because the skin lesions resemble streptococcal cellulitis and respond very rapidly to β-lactam antibiotics, and the organism is difficult to isolate from the blood. All HLO in our series were isolated from blood using the ESP system and were not detected in 2 other widely used commercial blood culture systems.

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Pérez-Santiago, J., Ramirez-Gaona, M., Holm-Kennedy, R., Smith, D. M., & Fierer, J. (2017). Bacteremia and Skin Infections in Four Patients Caused by Helicobacter-Like Organisms. Open Forum Infectious Diseases, 4(3). https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx074

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