2.Contact Lens-associated Nocardial Necrotizing Scleritis.
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology 2013;27(4):291-293
A 52 year-old, contact lens-wearing man presented with progressive right eye pain and redness for one month. He had been evaluated and treated for necrotizing scleritis by multiple eye care specialists prior to presentation. He underwent a complete systemic work-up for both autoimmune and infectious causes of scleritis, including a culture. The culture revealed heavy growth of Nocardia asteroides complexes. The patient was treated with topical amikacin and oral Bactrim. Following several weeks of antibiotic treatment, the patient's infection resolved completely, and his visual acuity returned to baseline status. Nocardia is a rare but potentially devastating cause of necrotizing scleritis that may affect contact lens wearers without an associated keratitis. Prompt recognition and early treatment with appropriate antimicrobial agents are critical to achieve a favorable outcome.
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use
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Contact Lenses/*adverse effects/*microbiology
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Nocardia Infections/*diagnosis/drug therapy
;
Nocardia asteroides/*isolation & purification
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Scleritis/drug therapy/*microbiology
3.A Case of Disseminated Nocardiosis in Kidney Transplant Recipient.
Hang Jae JUNG ; Bung Duk KIM ; Eyn Young LEE ; Kyu Hang CHO ; Sung Wha BAE ; Jun Bum PARK ; Young Gin KIM ; Jun Young DO ; Kyung Woo YOON
Korean Journal of Nephrology 1999;18(4):634-638
Nocardiosis is a rare infection seen most commonly in immunocompromized patients. Most patients have pulmonary involvement, but some develop disseminated infection. A 52-year-old man, treated with immunosuppressive drugs for 3 months after kidney transplantation, developed pulmonary nocardiosis and disseminated infection involving brain, skin, and both uvea. The diagnosis was made by open lung biopsy specimens showing characteristic weak acid fastness with modified Ziel-Neelsen stainig and histologic examination. Immunosuppressive therapy was continued and combination of surgical drainage of brain abscess and chemotherapy with Minocycline were successful. With the increasing number of allograft recipients and concomitant immunosuppression, the possibility of an increase in Nocardia opportunistic infections exists.
Allografts
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Biopsy
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Brain
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Brain Abscess
;
Diagnosis
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Drainage
;
Drug Therapy
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Humans
;
Immunosuppression
;
Kidney Transplantation
;
Kidney*
;
Lung
;
Middle Aged
;
Minocycline
;
Nocardia
;
Nocardia Infections*
;
Opportunistic Infections
;
Skin
;
Transplantation*
;
Uvea
4.Nocardiosis Following Renal Transplantation.
Tae Hee KIM ; Song Chol KIM ; Joon Hong SOHN ; Heung Sup SUNG ; Mi Na KIM ; Duck Jong HAN
The Journal of the Korean Society for Transplantation 2001;15(2):208-216
PURPOSE: Infection with Nocardia species is an uncommon yet important cause of morbidity and mortality in renal transplant recipients. METHODS: We experienced 6 cases of nocardiosis among 239 renal transplant recipients maintained on tacrolimus- or cyclosporine-based immunosuppression from May 1999 to February 2001. RESULTS: All the six patients had pulmonary nocardiosis from 36 to 220 (mean 82) days after renal transplantation. Due to a multiplicity of infection sites, cerebral abscess was detected in 2 patients, soft tissue abscess in 2, allograft abscess in 1 and subretinal abscess in 1. Comparing the routine trimethoprim/ sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) prophylaxis after transplantation, 5 out of 6 patients took TMP/SMX for a mean of 1.8 months due to an increased AST/ALT. All the cases required invasive diagnostic procedures such as percutaneous needle aspiration (PC NA) or stereotactic aspiration. In the antimicrobial susceptibility test, isolates were sensitive to TMP/SMX, amikacin and imipenem. In the early stage of infection, we used triple chemotherapy (TMP/SMX, amikacin, imipenem) for cerebral nocardiosis and dual therapy (TMP/SMX, amikacin) for localized pulmonary infection. There were no mortality and all the graft maintained stable function. CONCLUSION: After organ transplantation, pneumonia accompanied with satellite soft tissue infection should be considered as a nocardiosis. Pro- phylactic use of TMP/SMX is crucial for effective prevention of nocardiosis.
Abscess
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Allografts
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Amikacin
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Brain
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Brain Abscess
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Drug Therapy
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Humans
;
Imipenem
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Immunosuppression
;
Kidney Transplantation*
;
Mortality
;
Needles
;
Nocardia
;
Nocardia Infections*
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Organ Transplantation
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Pneumonia
;
Soft Tissue Infections
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Sulfamethoxazole
;
Transplantation
;
Transplants
6.Nocardia osteomyelitis in a pachymeningitis patient: an example of a difficult case to treat with antimicrobial agents.
Kyoo Ho SHIN ; Woo Suk LEE ; Young Ki SON ; Kyungwon LEE ; Yunsop CHONG
Yonsei Medical Journal 1998;39(6):604-610
Antimicrobial agents played a miraculous role in the treatment of bacterial infections until resistant bacteria became widespread. Besides antimicrobial-resistant bacteria, many factors can influence the cure of infection. Nocardia infection may be a good example which is difficult to cure with antimicrobial agents alone. A 66-year-old man developed soft tissue infection of the right buttock and thigh. He was given prednisolone and azathioprine for pachymeningitis 3 months prior to admission. Despite surgical and antimicrobial treatment (sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim), the infection spread to the femur and osteomyelitis developed. The case showed that treatment of bacterial infection is not always as successful as was once thought because recent isolates of bacteria are more often resistant to various antimicrobial agents, intracellular parasites are difficult to eliminate even with the active drug in vitro, and infections in some sites such as bone are refractory to treatment especially when the patient is in a compromised state. In conclusion, for the treatment of infections, clinicians need to rely on laboratory tests more than before and have to consider the influence of various host factors.
Aged
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Case Report
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Drug Resistance, Microbial/physiology
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Dura Mater/microbiology*
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Fatal Outcome
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Femur/radiography
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Human
;
Male
;
Meningitis/microbiology*
;
Nocardia Infections/physiopathology
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Nocardia Infections/drug therapy*
;
Osteomyelitis/radionuclide imaging
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Osteomyelitis/radiography
;
Osteomyelitis/microbiology*
7.Reactive Cutaneous Cytophagocytosis in Nocardiosis.
Chi Yeon KIM ; Tae Heung KIM ; Won Sup LEE ; Ai Young LEE
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2002;17(2):279-282
Cutaneous nocardiosis, which usually manifests in the form of pustules, abscesses, or subcutaneous nodules, is occasionally found in immunocompromised patients. A 59-yr-old Korean man with myasthenia gravis and thymoma developed nodular skin lesions on his trunk. Histopathologically, abscess formation with a dense infiltrate of neutrophils and many cytophagic histiocytes were observed. Numerous filamentous organisms, which turned out to be Nocardia asteroides by culture, were also found. After sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim therapy, all of the skin lesions rapidly decreased in size, with a marked diminution of the number of cytophagic histiocytes, and cleared up within four months. On reporting a case of cutaneous nocardiosis showing unusual histopathologic findings, we considered that reactive conditions should be included in the differential diagnosis of the cutaneous cytophagocytosis, and that nocardiosis could be one of the diseases showing reactive cytophagocytosis.
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use
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Histiocytes/*immunology
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Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Myasthenia Gravis/complications
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Neutrophils/*immunology
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Nocardia Infections/drug therapy/*immunology/microbiology/pathology
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Nocardia asteroides/drug effects/*immunology/isolation & purification
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Phagocytosis/*immunology
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Skin Diseases, Bacterial/drug therapy/*immunology/microbiology/pathology
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Thymoma/complications
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Thymus Neoplasms/complications
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Treatment Outcome
;
Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole Combination/therapeutic use
8.Cerebellar Nocardiosis and Myopathy from Long-Term Corticosteroids for Idiopathic Thrombocytopenia.
Marlies FRANK ; Herbert WOSCHNAGG ; Gunther MOLZER ; Josef FINSTERER
Yonsei Medical Journal 2010;51(1):131-137
Infection of the central nervous system with Nocardia sp. usually manifests as supratentorial abscesses. Supratentorial and cerebellar abscesses from infection with Nocardia sp. following immunosuppression with long-term corticosteroids for idiopathic thrombocytopenia (ITP) have not been reported. An 83 years-old, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-negative, polymorbid male with ITP for which he required corticosteroids since age 53 years developed tiredness, dyspnoea, hemoptysis, abdominal pain, and progressive gait disturbance. Imaging studies of the lung revealed an enhancing tumour in the right upper lobe with central and peripheral necrosis, multiple irregularly contoured hyperdensities over both lungs, and right-sided pleural effusions. Sputum culture grew Nocardia sp. Neurological diagnostic work-up revealed dysarthria, dysphagia, ptosis, hypoacusis, tremor, dysdiadochokinesia, proximal weakness of the lower limbs, diffuse wasting, and stocking-type sensory disturbances. The neurological deficits were attributed to an abscess in the upper cerebellar vermis, myopathy from corticosteroids, and polyneuropathy. Meropenem for 37 days and trimethoprime-sulfamethoxazole for 3 months resulted in a reduction of the pulmonary, but not the cerebral lesions. Therefore, sultamicillin was begun, but without success. Long-term therapy with corticosteroids for ITP may induce not only steroid myopathy but also immune-incompetence with the development of pulmonary and cerebral nocardiosis. Cerebral nocardiosis may not sufficiently respond to long-term antibiotic therapy why switching to alternative antibiotics or surgery may be necessary.
Adrenal Cortex Hormones/*adverse effects/*therapeutic use
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Aged, 80 and over
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Cerebellar Diseases/*chemically induced/*diagnosis/pathology
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Humans
;
Immunosuppression
;
Male
;
Muscular Diseases/*chemically induced/pathology
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Nocardia Infections/*diagnosis
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Purpura, Thrombocytopenic, Idiopathic/*drug therapy