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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2004, p. 3369-3370, Vol. 42, No. 7
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.7.3369-3370.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
| CASE REPORT |
Orthopaedic Department,1 Microbiology Laboratory, Derbyshire Royal Infirmary, Derby DE1 2QY, United Kingdom2
Received 25 February 2004/ Returned for modification 12 March 2004/ Accepted 7 April 2004
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Microbiological studies. A Gram-stained smear of the aspirate showed many polymorphonuclear leukocytes but no organisms. The specimen was directly inoculated onto standard solid medium (Oxoid Columbia agar base with 5% defibrinated horse blood and the same agar made into chocolate agar) incubated both in 5% CO2 and anaerobically at 37°C for 48 h. The culture plate incubated under anaerobic conditions yielded a heavy growth of a pleomorphic gram-negative bacillus which on subculture was shown to be an obligate anaerobe sensitive to metronidazole and penicillin. The organism was identified as F. necrophorum by the Rapid ID 32A identification system for anaerobes (Biomerieux Diagnostics).
Lemierre (5) wrote a review of F. necrophorum infection in 1936. He described a syndrome in which oropharyngeal sepsis was complicated by septic thrombophlebitis of the internal jugular vein and multiple metastatic infections such as septic arthritis. F. necrophorum rarely causes isolated joint infection as reported in this case. Sinave et al. (8) analyzed 38 cases of Lemierre syndrome, out of which only five cases had joint infections. Ninety-seven percent of the patients had pleuropulmonary disease. Almost all the patients had acute tonsillar infection as the portal of entry rather than a dental infection as in the case we report. Sinave et al. found that the interval between the appearance of the oropharyngeal infection and the onset of septicemia was typically 1 week or less. The case that we report presented with isolated septic arthritis and not with the typical features of Lemierre syndrome. A Medline literature search revealed one reported case of isolated F. necrophorum septic arthritis. This was an infection of the hip in a 9-year-old boy 3 days following tonsillectomy (1). There are a number of cases reported in the literature of Lemierre syndrome with associated septic arthritis (1, 4, 7). A study of anaerobic infections over 10 years (1976 to 1986) found 65 cases of septic arthritis (2). Fusobacteria were the cause in only five cases, and none of them had sepsis in the knee joint. Another study over 3 years found 46 cases of anaerobic septic arthritis (3). Fusobacterium species were isolated in two cases, one of which was a postoperative infection and the other of which occurred in a patient with a chronic debilitating disease.
F. necrophorum is an obligate anaerobic, nonmotile, gram-negative bacillus about 0.5 to 0.7 µm in diameter with rounded tapered ends. Cells from older cultures may be irregularly stained, and beaded forms are common. Colonies on agar are pale and semitranslucent with an irregular edge, and cultures produce a notable putrid odor. Fusobacteria are usually sensitive to penicillin G as well as other antimicrobials with activity against anaerobic bacteria such as clindamycin, metronidazole, cefoxitin, and chloramphenicol (6, 8).
In the case reported here two important clues to the microbial etiology of the infection went unnoticed: firstly the history of a recent dental abscess and surgery and secondly the foul-smelling nature of the joint fluid. Recognition of these important pointers as to etiology would have better directed initial antimicrobial therapy.
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