Globicatella sanguinis Endophthalmitis in a Patient from India.
Himansu Sekhar BeheraSushree SatavisaSrikanta Kumar PadhyPublished in: Ocular immunology and inflammation (2022)
A 55-year-old lady with bamboo stick injury to her right eye suffered corneal laceration with retained wooden foreign body in the anterior chamber. In the first-sitting corneal laceration repair, lens aspiration with foreign body removal was done. Two days later, she developed signs and symptoms of endophthalmitis for which pars plana vitrectomy with intravitreal antibiotic injection was done. Smear examination of vitreous sample revealed the presence of Gram-positive cocci in pairs and short chains on Gram's stain on the same day. Confluent white, moist, and alpha-hemolyticus bacterial colonies appeared over the inoculum on blood agar and chocolate plates on the next day, which later was identified as Globicatella sanguinis by VITEK-2 compact system. To our knowledge, this is the second reported case of Globicatella -related endophthalmitis; the outcome was favourable in the incumbent case owing to an early intervention and isolate being susceptible to vancomycin.
Keyphrases
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- gram negative
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- ultrasound guided
- randomized controlled trial
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- optical coherence tomography
- multidrug resistant
- single cell
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- case report
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- wound healing
- staphylococcus aureus
- endothelial cells