Pediatric osteomyelitis due to rare tropical multi-drug resistance (MDR) organisms: a treatment quandary.
Chan Jing ErWong Kin ChunMing Chiang LimMohd Naim Bin Mohd NasirPublished in: Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo (2021)
Osteomyelits due to concurrent multi-drug resistance organisms is difficult to treat for any surgeon and infectious disease physician. An eleven-year-old boy presenting with an open fracture of the left radius and ulna after a fall in a stagnant wet field. Despite prophylactic antibiotics and surgical intervention, the open wound was infected, and Chromobacterium violaceum as well as Klebsiella pneumoniae were isolated. He was treated with six weeks of parenteral cefepime and amikacin and was discharged upon clinical improvement. Unfortunately, chronic osteomyelitis set in with persistent sinus drainage. He then underwent a second procedure for debridement of the wound and Burkholderia pseudomallei was isolated. Parenteral antibiotic therapy was initiated progressing with a marked improvement. However, the long course of antibiotics had exhausted the patient and his family, leading to a premature interruption of the parenteral antibiotic. Despite the suboptimal antibiotic course, there were no signs of relapsed osteomyelitis during subsequent review. The timely surgical intervention with appropriate sampling for subsequent microorganism isolation guided the suitability of the treatment line.
Keyphrases
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- multidrug resistant
- randomized controlled trial
- escherichia coli
- infectious diseases
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- gram negative
- minimally invasive
- emergency department
- case report
- stem cells
- climate change
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- radiation therapy
- combination therapy
- wound healing
- ultrasound guided
- robot assisted