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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 1998, p. 3057-3059, Vol. 36, No. 10
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Staphylococcal Scalded-Skin Syndrome Complicating
Wound Infection in a Preterm Infant with Postoperative
Chylothorax
Bjoern
Peters,1
Juliane
Hentschel,1
Harald
Mau,2
Elke
Halle,3
Wolfgang
Witte,4 and
Michael
Obladen1,*
Department of
Neonatology,1
Department of Pediatric
Surgery,2 and
Department of
Microbiology,3 Charité-Virchow Hospital,
Humbold University, Berlin, and
Branch of the Robert Koch
Institute, Staphylococcal Reference Center,
Wernigerode,4 Germany
Received 9 March 1998/Returned for modification 17 April
1998/Accepted 14 June 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
The course of infection in a 3-week-old premature newborn suffering
from extensive dermatitis with flaccid blisters is described. Staphylococcus aureus was recovered from a local wound
infection around a chest tube inserted to drain a postoperative
chylothorax. The strain isolated tested positive for the
eta gene for exfoliative toxin A, the causative agent of
staphylococcal scalded-skin syndrome (SSSS). In this case, prematurity
and loss of chylus with consecutive lymphopenia may have contributed to
development of SSSS.
 |
TEXT |
Systemic findings and generalized
involvement leading to the clinical appearance of scalded skin are the
hallmarks of the staphylococcal scalded-skin syndrome (SSSS). It is
caused by one of the two exfoliative toxins (ETs) exfoliatin A (ET-A)
and ET-B, which are produced by certain strains of Staphylococcus
aureus and which lead to intraepidermal cleavage. Newborns and
infants younger than 5 years of age are predominantly affected
(13). SSSS is typically associated with a trivial infective
focus in the nasopharynx, conjunctivae, the skin, the inner ear, the
umbilicus, or the urinary tract (13). Reports of SSSS
following postoperative wound infection are rare (1, 2). We
report an unusual case of a premature infant operated on for an
esophageal interruption complicated by postoperative chylothorax
(accumulation of lymphatic liquid in the pleural space) and subsequent
development of SSSS. ET-A-producing S. aureus was cultured
from a local wound infection around a chest tube.
Case report.
The boy (gestational age, 34 weeks; birth weight,
1,695 g [3 lb 12 oz]) was admitted to the neonatal intensive care and
diagnosed with esophageal interruption. Four hours after birth, the
malformation was corrected by surgery. The postoperative course was
complicated by chylothorax of the right side, leading to respiratory
insufficiency 14 days after the operation. A no. 8 French chest tube
(XRO trocar drain no. 625; Vygon, Écouen, France) was placed for
drainage of fluid. Twenty-five milliliters of a milky yellowish fluid
containing 2.1 g of protein per dl, 648 mg of triglycerides per
dl, 57 mg of cholesterol per dl, and 22,500 nucleated
cells/mm3 containing 95% lymphocytes (all values
indicative for chylus) was aspirated. Culture of drainage fluid yielded
no organism. Therapy of chylothorax consisted of parenteral nutrition
followed by feeding with a medium-chain triglyceride diet and
continuous pleural drainage. A total of 233 ml of fluid was collected
over a 14-day period. Two weeks after the onset of the chylothorax, a
local wound infection with purulent drainage and skin reddening at the
catheter insertion site was noted. The tube was removed, and bacterial
cultures from the site of infection were obtained. Two days later, the
infant developed a discrete generalized erythema and crusting around
the nose and mouth. Within hours, flaccid blisters formed, leading to a
widespread exfoliation in which the skin peeled off in large sheets
(Fig. 1). This left a moist, red, and
denuded surface. The infant was extremely agitated and sensitive to
touch. The lymphocyte count was 948/mm3 (normal value,
1,500 to 3,000/mm3) in comparison to 4,050/mm3
at birth, 3,880/mm3 before onset of chylothorax, and
8,694/mm3 at the day of discharge. The C-reactive protein
was normal. The clinical picture was interpreted as SSSS, and
prophylactic intravenous treatment with flucloxacillin (100 mg/kg of
body weight/day in three doses) was started 8 h after onset of
blistering. The supportive care of the patient consisted of fluid
replacement, substitution of protein loss, antiseptic dressing,
analgesic treatment, and aseptic care. An incubator was used to help
maintain the infant's body temperature. Despite rapid improvement in
general condition, the boy's skin continued to exfoliate for the first
3 days after antibiotic treatment had been started. Most areas of the
skin were reepithelialized after 8 days, and complete resolution
without scarring was noted within 14 days. The chylothorax did not
relapse, and the infant was discharged to home after 59 days.
Bacteriology.
Blood cultures yielded no growth, but from
cultures of the purulent drainage around the catheter, S. aureus was isolated on Columbia blood agar. The isolate was a
coagulase-positive strain with typical colony morphology. The
antimicrobial susceptibility testing was done by microdilution
according to the "Deutsche Industrie-Norm" (German industrial
norm). The strain was a typical methicillin-sensitive S. aureus strain, for which there were the following MICs: penicillin G, >1 mg/liter (resistant); oxacillin, 0.25 mg/liter; gentamicin, 0.25 mg/liter; ciprofloxacin, 0.125 mg/liter; erythromycin, 0.25 mg/liter;
clindamycin, 0.125 mg/liter; vancomycin, 0.5 mg/liter; teicoplanin,
0.25 mg/liter; and rifampin, 0.125 mg/liter (all sensitive).
For phage typing, the international basic set of phages typing S. aureus was used; the methodology corresponds to that of Blair and
Williams (3). The strain could not be phage typed.
For PCR of exfoliative toxin genes
eta and
etb,
primers and PCR mixes were used as previously described by Johnson et
al.
(
15); the annealing temperature was 55°C. The strain
was shown
to possess the
eta gene for ET-A production but no
etb (ET-B)
determinant (Fig.
2A).

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|
FIG. 2.
(A) PCR for eta (lane 1, reference strain
1634; lane 2, S. aureus 1035/97) and etb (lane 3, reference strain 114; lane 4, S. aureus 1035/97). Lane S,
molecular mass standard. (B) SmaI macrorestriction pattern
for S. aureus 1035/97 (lane 1) and the reference strain for
eta production, 1634/97 (lane 2). Lane R, reference strain
8325. (C) PCR for DNA stretches flanked by Tn916 and
ribosomal binding site for S. aureus 1035/97 (lane 1) and
S. aureus 1634/97 (lane 2).
|
|
Genotyping of
S. aureus by using
SmaI
macrorestriction analysis (pulsed-field gel electrophoresis) was
performed as described
previously (
27); for a description of
tar916-shida PCR, see
reference
6. The
SmaI macrorestriction pattern of the strain
(1035/97) in
question was different from that of
S. aureus 1634/97
(reference strain for the clonal group of the species
S. aureus capable of ET-A production [Fig.
2B]), but the PCR for
DNA stretches
flanked by the transposon Tn
916 attachment
region and the Shine-Dalgarno
sequence (tar916-shida PCR) indicates
that the two strains are
related (Fig.
2C).
Discussion.
SSSS was first described in 1878 by Ritter von
Rittershain (24) and is now clearly distinguished from other
diseases causing generalized epidermal necrosis, such as toxic
epidermal necrolysis (18, 21). SSSS is a clinical
manifestation of infection with exotoxin-producing staphylococci. The
disease results from the effect of one of the two epidermolytic toxins
ET-A and ET-B. In the present case, investigations for ET were positive
for ET-A but negative for ET-B.
In generalized forms of SSSS, toxin diffuses from an infected focus in
the absence of specific antitoxin antibody and spreads
hematogenously.
ET-A and ET-B are produced in the logarithmic
phase of bacterial growth
and differ in antigenic specificity,
heat stability, molecular weight,
and immunologic properties (
13).
The toxins act by
separating cells from the stratum granulosum
and stratum spinosum via
disruption of the desmosomes within the
epidermis (
9). The
nucleotide sequences of ET-A and ET-B have
been determined by several
groups (
15,
16). Approximately
5 to 6% of
S. aureus strains are ET producers, with over 80% of
the ET as ET-A
(
22).
S. aureus strains with a capacity for ET
formation have been described as a separate clonal group, as already
suggested by their common phage pattern, including phage 71 (
20).
The diagnosis of SSSS can be confirmed by recovery of group II
staphylococci. Blisters and erosions frequently yield no organisms
when
sampled for bacterial cultures, and blood cultures are usually
sterile.
Strains isolated from local bacterial foci may be phage
typed to
determine epidemiological relatedness, since most toxigenic
strains of
S. aureus are identified by group II phage (types 71
and
55), but other phage types have been implicated (
7,
8).
However, the limits of phage typing become obvious when the
corresponding
strain is revealed as nontypeable. Although
S. aureus strains
exhibiting group II phage patterns (including phage
71) exhibit
related
SmaI restriction patterns, they may not
necessarily possess
the
eta gene (
25). The strain
in the present case of SSSS was
nontypeable by phages, and its
SmaI macrorestriction pattern was
different from that of
reference strain 1634/97; however, the
tar916-shida-PCR, a quite
different method of molecular population
analysis (
6),
suggests a relatedness and a probable descent
from this clonal group.
SSSS is predominantly a disease of infancy and early childhood, with
only a few adult cases reported (
5). In the neonate,
the
usual onset is between days 3 and 16 of age (
7), and a
congenital case has been reported (
17). Only six cases of
SSSS
in premature infants have been described (
10,
14,
25),
although
newborn nurseries and neonatal intensive care units are at
risk
for outbreaks of SSSS (
7,
8,
25). Nursing staff
infected
or colonized with ET-producing
S. aureus are
typically the source
of such outbreaks (
25). Factors
responsible for the age distribution
include renal immaturity leading
to decreased toxin clearance
in neonates (
11) and lack of
immunity to the toxin (
13). The
percentage of carriers of
antibody to ET-A decreases from 88%
immediately after birth to a
minimum of 30% at 4 months to 2 years
and then rises again
(
13). The age of our patient was 4 weeks
at onset of SSSS.
Thus, lack of transplacental ET-A antibodies
due to nonimmunity of the
mother as well as decreasing antibody
titers may have contributed to
SSSS in our patient. Antibody levels
are relatively low in premature
infants (
26,
28) compared
to those in full-term babies, and
this could have been an additional
pathogenic factor for development of
SSSS in our case.
SSSS as a complication of wound infection has been rarely described for
neonates (
1,
2) and has never been found in
combination with
chronic loss of lymphocytes. Drainage of chylothorax
may cause
immunodeficiencies, including abnormal cell-mediated
immune response
(
19). Patients with chylothorax are lymphopenic
and
demonstrate depressed relative and absolute numbers of helper
and
inducer T cells (CD4), normal to increased relative numbers
of
cytotoxic and suppressor T cells (CD8), and a reversed CD4/CD8
ratio
(
4,
12). Some patients show a reduced proliferative
response
of peripheral blood mononuclear cells to mitogens (
4,
12).
These findings may partially explain abnormal cellular
and humoral
immunity in patients with chylothorax and may account
for the
development of SSSS in our patient, since the lymphocyte
count of the
presented infant was at an absolute minimum at onset
of SSSS. Similar
findings have been reported in an adult patient
with acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome who developed SSSS and
had a pattern of
T-cell levels seen with loss of chylus (
23).
Conclusions.
In addition to the typical clinical picture,
detection of ET is required for diagnosis of SSSS. The identification
of ET-A and ET-B genes in strains of S. aureus by PCR offers
a reliable, rapid, and inexpensive method for detection of toxigenic
strains (15). An immature immune system predisposes the
preterm neonate to infection (20, 26, 28). Transient
weakening of the immune system by loss of lymphatic fluid accompanies
chylothorax. The combination of both conditions may increase
susceptibility to SSSS if infants have been colonized with ET-producing
S. aureus. Studies of lymphocyte subpopulations and
functional lymphocyte testing may help to further elucidate the
pathogenesis of SSSS in the future.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Neonatology, Charité-Virchow Hospital, Augustenburger Platz 1, D-13353 Berlin, Germany. Phone: 49-30-45066122. Fax: 49-30-45066922. E-mail: bpeters{at}ukrv.de.
 |
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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 1998, p. 3057-3059, Vol. 36, No. 10
0095-1137/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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