Lethal Aeromonas veronii Sepsis in the Course of Medicinal Leech Therapy.
Karl Christoph SprollJulian LommenAdriana BalasiuLara K SchornNorbert R KüblerBirgit HenrichRainer KramSabine PetersdorfPublished in: Antibiotics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
A patient with oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) underwent complex surgical tumor therapy, including the reconstruction of soft tissues using a radial forearm flap. Due to venous congestion that could only partly be resolved by revision surgery, leech therapy was started on the second postoperative day. The patient developed pneumonia and sepsis and died as a result of septic shock, despite having received targeted broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy since day 5. Aeromonas spp. were cultured from both the patient's specimens and unused leeches. Biochemical identification and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) yielded inconsistent identification results. Finally, microbiological identification of Aeromonas spp. was performed via 16S rDNA sequencing and use of the basic local alignment search tool (BLAST), and strains from both the patient and the leeches were identified as Aeromonas veronii . Aeromonas spp. strains derived from the patient and leeches and independent laboratory strains were submitted to randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) subtyping. RAPD of A. veronii strains from both sources revealed an identical pattern, strongly suggesting the transmission of A. veronii from the leeches to the patient. Physicians should be aware of the potential for severe lethal infections as a fatal side-effect of leech therapy in critically ill patients, which should be addressed using antibiotic prophylaxis.
Keyphrases
- case report
- septic shock
- escherichia coli
- gene expression
- primary care
- mass spectrometry
- coronary artery disease
- patients undergoing
- total knee arthroplasty
- climate change
- drug delivery
- bone marrow
- drinking water
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- respiratory failure
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- soft tissue
- bioinformatics analysis