A Rare Case of Osteomyelitis of an Ankle Caused by Mycobacterium chelonae .
Lenka RyskovaRudolf KuklaRadka BolehovskaLibor ProkesMilan VajdaTomas KuceraIvo PavlikPavel BostikPavel RyškaPublished in: Antibiotics (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Mycobacterium chelonae , a rapidly growing nontuberculous mycobacterium, is usually described as a causative agent of soft tissue infections (postsurgical, posttraumatic, posttransplantation, postinjection, catheter infection, etc.), but only rarely as a cause of osteomyelitis. The authors describe a case report of a 72-year-old man with osteomyelitis of the talus. Initially, the infection was assessed as a soft tissue infection, without any osteolytic changes on the X-ray. After cultivation with subsequent targeted molecular typing of the rpo B gene, M. chelonae was identified from the affected tissue. The bone involvement was subsequently detected on MRI and confirmed histologically with findings of the granulomatous tissue and acid-fast bacilli. The patient was initially treated intravenously with a combination of tigecycline, amikacin, and moxifloxacin for 4 weeks, after which the oral combination of doxycycline and moxifloxacin continued. Identification of the infecting pathogen using molecular typing thus helped to establish the correct diagnosis and represents a rarely described case of osteomyelitis caused by M. chelonae.
Keyphrases
- soft tissue
- rare case
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- escherichia coli
- computed tomography
- bone mineral density
- multidrug resistant
- cancer therapy
- genome wide
- magnetic resonance
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- acinetobacter baumannii
- genetic diversity
- postmenopausal women
- candida albicans
- dual energy
- ultrasound guided
- bone loss