Fatal septicemia due to mycoplasma arginini: A new human zoonosis

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Abstract

A 64-year-old slaughterhouse worker with advanced non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma developed septicemia and pneumonia. Mycoplasma arginini, a wall-free prokaryote found in a variety of domestic animal hosts, was repeatedly isolated from blood and bronchial washings from the patient. Immunosuppression, in part caused by hypogammaglobulinemia, probably played a key role in predisposing the patient to a fatal infection. This case suggests that animal mycoplasmas should be considered in the list of infectious agents acquired by immunosuppressed hosts. © 1992 Oxford University Press.

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Yechouron, A., Lefebvre, J., Robson, H. G., Rose, D. L., & Tully, J. G. (1992). Fatal septicemia due to mycoplasma arginini: A new human zoonosis. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 15(3), 434–438. https://doi.org/10.1093/clind/15.3.434

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