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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4280-4282, Vol. 43, No. 8
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.8.4280-4282.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
First Case of Infant Botulism Caused by Clostridium baratii Type F in California
Jason R. Barash,
Tania W. H. Tang,
and
Stephen S. Arnon*
Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program, California Department of Health Services, Richmond, California 94804
Received 23 February 2005/
Returned for modification 30 March 2005/
Accepted 23 April 2005

ABSTRACT
In late 2003 a severely hypotonic neonate, just 38 h old at
onset of illness, was found to have infant botulism caused by
neurotoxigenic
Clostridium baratii type F. Environmental investigations
failed to identify a source of this strain. This is the youngest
patient reported to have infant botulism and the fifth instance
of infant botulism caused by
C. baratii type F.

CASE REPORT
In late 2003 a 47-h-old neonate with a 9-h history of poor feeding
and lethargy was airlifted from a community hospital in rural
northern California to an acute-care tertiary facility in San
Francisco, California, where the admitting diagnosis was acute
hypotonia and respiratory failure. An inborn error of metabolism
was suspected because the urine had an unusually sweet smell,
which prompted suspicion of maple syrup urine disease. As a
result, the patient underwent three consecutive daily courses
of hemodialysis. The day after the third course, she had intermittent
movement of her distal extremities but otherwise remained mostly
hypotonic. The possibility of infant botulism was initially
dismissed because of the patient's young age, fulminant onset
of illness, and the quick recovery of her slight distal extremity
control.
By hospital day 12 all metabolic test results were normal, thereby leading the attending neurologists to consider the possibility of infant botulism. A stool specimen submitted to our laboratory was emulsified and extracted in gelatin phosphate diluent and centrifuged. The extract was injected into pairs of Swiss-Webster mice in accord with the standard mouse neutralization bioassay for botulinum toxin detection (Table 1) (5). All relevant institutional policies and federal guidelines for the ethical use of laboratory animals were followed. The stool pellet was inoculated into two chopped-meat-glucose-starch broth tubes and onto 4% egg yolk agar, botulinum selective medium (16), and 5% Schaedler sheep blood agar. One broth tube was heat-shocked at 70°C for 15 min. All media were incubated at 35°C in an anaerobe chamber (5).
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TABLE 1. Laboratory identification of C. baratii neurotoxin type F as the causative agent of the case reported here
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The bioassay of the stool extract identified a heat-labile toxin
that was neutralized only by type F monovalent botulinum antitoxin
(Table
1). The directly inoculated stool culture plates revealed
heavy growth of lecithinase-positive colonies in almost pure
culture on egg yolk agar and slightly beta-hemolytic colonies
on sheep blood agar after 24 h of incubation. No growth was
observed on botulinum selective medium at 72 h. Nonproteolytic
growth was evident at 24 h in both broth culture tubes. Filtrate
from a pure culture of the lecithinase-positive organism, like
the stool extract, tested positive for botulinum toxin type
F. Test results from additional subsequent stool specimens confirmed
the finding (Table
1). Biochemical characterization and 16S
rRNA sequencing, together with the culture and bioassay results,
identified the organism as
Clostridium baratii type F. The patient
received supportive care but was not treated intravenously with
botulism immune globulin (human) (commercially known as BabyBIG)
because of the delayed referral. Although initially severely
paralyzed, the patient quickly regained muscle strength and
was released from the hospital on day 19 of illness. The three
episodes of hemodialysis for suspected maple syrup urine disease
early in the course of illness may have aided in the rapid recovery.
Intestinal colonization by
C. baratii lasted more than 3, but
less than 5, weeks (Table
1).
C. baratii differs from the ubiquitous
C. botulinum in that an environmental source of toxigenic
C. baratii has not been identified, so an extensive investigation
to identify a possible environmental reservoir of this organism
was undertaken. An epidemiological interview was conducted at
home with the patient's parents. Construction of a timeline
of events from birth to initial hospitalization indicated that
the onset of illness had occurred just 38 h after birth, suggesting
that the patient's exposure to
C. baratii may have occurred
at the birthing hospital in the immediate perinatal period.
Multiple environmental samples were collected from the patient's home and birthing hospital (Table 2). Also, when the patient's correct diagnosis became known, fecal specimens were collected from both parents (a month after onset of the infant's illness) to evaluate the possibility of subclinical intestinal colonization. Despite an extensive laboratory effort, no C. baratii was isolated from the adult fecal or environmental specimens, including household vacuum cleaner dust, a known source of C. botulinum (1, 13, 15, 17, 18). The family car and pickup truck air filters, studied as a means of sampling airborne spores, were also negative. Parenthetically, C. botulinum type A was isolated from most of the soil sites sampled (which exemplifies the ubiquity of this organism) (Table 2).
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TABLE 2. Environmental samples collected from California infant botulism patient's home and birth hospital for C. baratii culture
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Infant botulism is an acute, symmetric, descending, flaccid
paralysis that occurs in infants younger than 12 months of age.
The mean (median) age at onset for all California cases from
1976 to 2004 was 3.4 (3.1) months. Definitive laboratory diagnosis
identifies
Clostridium botulinum toxin and/or organisms in fecal
specimens following intestinal colonization by swallowed
C. botulinum spores (
2). After absorption, botulinum toxin produced
in the intestinal lumen binds to terminal motor neurons, where
it prevents acetylcholine release and thereby causes flaccid
paralysis (
2). Detection and identification of botulinum toxin
is accomplished using the mouse neutralization bioassay (
5).
With the exception of rare dual-toxin-producing strains, most C. botulinum strains produce just one of the seven known botulinum toxin types designated A to G (4, 7, 11). Worldwide, reported infant botulism almost always results from C. botulinum strains that produce botulinum toxin type A or type B. However, four cases of infant botulism caused by neurotoxigenic C. butyricum type E have been reported from Italy (3, 6). Also, C. baratii type F has caused four cases of infant botulism (Table 3) (8, 10, 11, 12, 19, 20, 21). We now report laboratory, environmental, and epidemiological aspects of the fifth instance of infant botulism caused by neurotoxigenic C. baratii type F. Clinical particulars of this case are reported elsewhere (14). This is the first such case to occur in California in our 29 years of laboratory surveillance and the youngest (age at onset of disease) infant botulism patient ever recorded.
Rare strains of
C. botulinum that produce two toxins and the
non-botulinum clostridia that produce botulinum toxin (i.e.,
C. butyricum type E and
C. baratii type F), may be more prevalent
than realized (
4,
9). The botulism diagnostic laboratory serves
a critical role in identifying these seldom-reported strains
(
4,
9). All previously reported U.S. cases of
C. baratii type
F infant botulism occurred in unusually young patients. We suggest
that clinicians include infant botulism caused by
C. baratii type F in their differential diagnosis if the infant's illness
is characterized by the triad that includes the following: (i)
rapid onset, (ii) severe paralysis. and (iii) young patient
age. The case reported here is remarkable because it is the
first recognition of
C. baratii type F infant botulism in California,
it describes the youngest known patient to have infant botulism
caused by
C. baratii type F, and it involves the youngest known
patient ever to have had infant botulism.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Will Probert, Kimmi Schrader, and Janet Ely for assisting
with the sequence analysis of this strain.
These studies were supported by the California Department of Health Services.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Infant Botulism Treatment and Prevention Program, California Department of Health Services, 850 Marina Bay Parkway, Room E-361, Richmond, CA 94804. Phone: (510) 231-7600. Fax: (510) 231-7609. E-mail:
sarnon{at}dhs.ca.gov.

Present address: Francis J. Curry National Tuberculosis Center, University of California, San Francisco, Calif. 

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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, August 2005, p. 4280-4282, Vol. 43, No. 8
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.8.4280-4282.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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