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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2003, p. 2237-2239, Vol. 41, No. 5
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.5.2237-2239.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Fatal Case of Endocarditis Due to Weissella confusa
James D. Flaherty,1 Paul N. Levett,2 Floyd E. Dewhirst,3 Theodore E. Troe,4 John R. Warren,4* and Stuart Johnson5,6,
Departments of Medicine,1
Pathology,4
Infectious Diseases, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University,5
Lakeside Division, Veterans Affairs Chicago Health Care System, Chicago, Illinois,6
Special Bacteriology Reference Laboratory, Meningitis and Special Pathogens Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia,2
Department of Molecular Genetics, Forsyth Institute, Boston, Massachusetts3
Received 2 December 2002/
Returned for modification 31 December 2002/
Accepted 25 January 2003

ABSTRACT
This is the first reported case of endocarditis due to the
Lactobacillus-like
vancomycin-resistant gram-positive bacillus
Weissella confusa.
Full identification and susceptibility testing of
Lactobacillus-like
organisms recovered in blood culture should be performed for
patients with clinical presentations that suggest endocarditis.

CASE REPORT
A 49-year-old man presented with a 100-lb weight loss over the
preceding year and weakness, memory loss, and rash but no fever
during the previous 6 months. Three months prior to admission
he experienced sudden loss of vision in his right eye. A year
prevoiusly he had been treated with oral corticosteroids for
transverse myelitis. He had a history of chronic alcohol abuse.
Recently his diet contained large quantities of milk. Clinically,
the protracted and atypical course of this patient's disease,
evidenced by weight loss and weakness over many months without
fever, initially suggested an occult malignancy rather than
endocarditis. On examination, his temperature was 37.0°C.
A petechial rash was present on his abdomen and all four extremities,
including the palms and soles, and the rash was confluent with
palpable purpura over his shins. His oral cavity had palatal
petechiae, and there were multiple carious and missing teeth.
He had right eye blindness except for slight nasal sparing.
His right pupil did not constrict to light and was larger than
the left, and his right fundus appeared pale, consistent with
central retinal artery thrombotic occlusion. A loud holosystolic
murmur was present over the entire precordium, and his spleen
was palpable. Laboratory examination showed a hemoglobin level
of 6.3 g/dl, an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of 55 mm/h, and
a serum creatinine level of 4.0 mg/dl. Human immunodeficiency
virus type 1 antibody tests were negative. A skin biopsy showed
leukocytoclastic vasculitis. A catalase-negative gram-positive
coccobacillus that demonstrated alpha hemolysis on sheep blood
agar was recovered from both the aerobic and anaerobic bottles
in three sets of blood cultures obtained at different times.
The vancomycin MIC for this organism in cation-supplemented
Mueller-Hinton broth with lysed horse blood was 512 µg/ml.
Transthoracic echocardiography revealed moderate-to-severe mitral
insufficiency and a nodular echogenicity on the mitral valve.
He refused antibiotic therapy and further care despite intensive
counseling and was found dead approximately 4 days after leaving
the hospital. Autopsy examination revealed cardiomegaly (720
g) and hepatosplenomegaly (2,400 and 1,200 g, respectively).
Microscopically there were septic emboli with bacterial colonies
in multiple organs, most notably the heart, but also the brain,
lungs, liver, kidneys, spleen, adrenals, and skin. Multiple
microscopic abscesses were noted in the myocardium, with bacterial
colonies in central regions of the abscesses. There were large
areas of acute coagulative necrosis of the myocardium despite
minimal coronary atherosclerosis. His mitral valve was sclerotic
and calcified, with microscopic infiltrates of polymorphonuclear
leukocytes, as well as deposits and fragments of fibrin consistent
with a detached vegetation.
The blood culture isolate was a nonmotile, pleomorphic gram-positive coccobacillus that produced small (1- to 2-mm) alpha-hemolytic colonies on rabbit blood agar after 2 days of incubation in air at 35°C. There was no growth on MacConkey agar. The organism was negative for catalase and cytochrome oxidase activity and was unable to reduce nitrate. Tests for esculin and arginine hydrolysis were positive, and a test for gelatin hydrolysis was negative. Acid was produced from cellobiose, galactose, maltose, sucrose, and xylose, but not from L-arabinose, melibiose, raffinose, or trehalose. The Special Bacteriology Reference Laboratory of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention identified this organism as Weissella confusa on the basis of these key reactions (6, 17).
The 16S rRNA cistrons of this isolate were amplified with the bacterial universal primers F24 (9 to 27, forward; 5'-GAGTTTGATYMTGGCTCAG-3') and F25 (1525 to 1541, reverse; 5'-AAGGAGGTGWTCCARCC-3'). Purified DNA from PCR was sequenced with an ABI Prism cycle sequencing kit (BigDye terminator cycle sequencing kit with AmpliTaq DNA polymerase FS; Perkin-Elmer). The primer F15 (519 to 533, reverse; 5'-TTACCGCGGCTGCTG-3') was used for sequencing. Sequence data were entered into RNA, a program set for data entry, editing, sequence alignment, secondary structure comparison, similarity matrix generation, and dendrogram construction for 16S rRNA in Microsoft QuickBasic for use with personal computers and were aligned as previously described (14). The database contains over 2,000 sequences obtained by the laboratory of one of us (F. E. Dewhirst) and over 1,000 from GenBank. Sequences were first checked by BLAST analysis versus all entries in GenBank (1), and sequences for related organisms not already in the database were downloaded and added. Approximately 500 bases of sequence were determined and, when searched against the database, differed by only a single base from W. confusa entry AB023241 and by only 9 bases from the closely related Weissella cibaria entry AJ295989. A phylogenetic tree including Weissella species and representatives of three neighboring lactic acid-producing genera was constructed by the neighbor-joining method (15) and is shown in Fig. 1.
Based on a comparative 16S rRNA phylogenetic analysis of
Leuconostoc-like
organisms from dry fermented Greek sausage, it was proposed
in 1993 that
Leuconostoc paramesenteroides and related species
(including
Lactobacillus confusus) be reclassified in a new
genus
Weissella (
6). Species of
Weissella including
W. confusa constitute a distinct phylogenetic group separate from those
of other genera of lactic acid bacteria, including
Leuconostoc,
Lactobacillus, and
Streptococcus (Fig.
1). Production of gas
from carbohydrates distinguishes
Weissella from homofermentative
lactobacilli and other lactic acid bacteria, while the presence
within the cell wall of lysine and alanine joined with an intrapeptide
bond distinguishes
Weissella from heterofermentative lactobacilli
(
6).
W. confusa can be differentiated from the genus
Leuconostoc by the hydrolysis of arginine and the formation of
D,
L-lactate.
W. cibaria is most closely related taxonomically to
W. confusa (Fig.
1). Both species have the ability to produce NH
3 from
arginine. However, unlike
W. confusa,
W. cibaria is negative
for the fermentation of galactose and xylose and positive for
the fermentation of arabinose (
5). Diverse habitats for
W. confusa have been detected: fermented meats, sourdough, acidic high-carbohydrate
foods, sugar cane, carrot juice, milk, canary liver, an otitis
sample from a dog, sewage, and human feces (
5,
6,
7,
9,
12).
The large quantity of milk in our patient's diet combined with
multiple carious and missing teeth could have provided an exposure
to and portal of entry for infection by
W. confusa.
In a survey of vancomycin-resistant gram-positive bacteria in the feces of 48 children, W. confusa was detected in stool specimens of 4 (9). One child was a multivisceral transplant recipient treated with an oral selective-decontamination regimen including vancomycin who developed W. confusa bacteremia. Subsequent to this survey, two additional episodes of W. confusa bacteremia were reported at the same hospital, and W. confusa was detected in stool and throat specimens as well (9). The clinical significance and outcome of W. confusa bacteremia were not described for these three episodes (9). An encapsulated abscess of the right thumb has been reported for an otherwise healthy 49-year-old man (2); purulent material obtained from the abscess by aspiration yielded a pure culture of W. confusa. A case of a 46-year-old man with a history of abdominal aortic aneurysm repair and aortic root homograft replacement due to Enterococcus faecalis endocarditis has recently been reported (13). This man developed fever and chills associated with multiple blood cultures positive for Klebsiella pneumoniae and W. confusa. Imaging studies of his abdomen and chest and a transesophageal echocardiogram failed to reveal a source of the bacteremia. With combined treatment by piperacillin-tazobactam and gentamicin, blood cultures became negative. Our patient is, as far as we know, the first reported case of monomicrobial bacteremia due to W. confusa unequivocally associated with invasive infection in which W. confusa has been identified by extensive phenotypic testing and rRNA gene sequencing. Features of our case are strongly reminiscent of Lactobacillus endocarditis, with systemic arterial embolization; an association with carious teeth and milk ingestion; predisposing factors including alcohol abuse, steroid therapy, and cardiac valve abnormalities; and a high mortality especially in the absence of antibiotic treatment (3, 10, 11, 16). Endocarditis is predominantly associated with three species of Lactobacillus, L. plantarum, L. casei, and L. acidophilus (3, 4, 8, 10, 11, 16). Lactobacillus and W. confusa demonstrate constitutive high-level resistance to vancomycin, and, for patients with continuous bacteremia accompanied by clinical signs of endocarditis, poor oral hygiene, predisposing factors for endocarditis, and/or embolic manifestations, Lactobacillus-like organisms detected in blood culture should be fully identified and tested for antimicrobial susceptibility.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Galter Pavilion 7-132A, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, 251 East Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611-2908. Phone: (312) 926-6949. Fax: (312) 926-4559. E-mail:
jwarren{at}nmh.org.

Present address: Research Service, Hines VA Hospital, Hines, IL 60141-5115. 

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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2003, p. 2237-2239, Vol. 41, No. 5
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.5.2237-2239.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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