Nocardiosis

Nocardiosis
Classification and external resources
Specialty Infectious disease
ICD-10 A43
ICD-9-CM 039.9
DiseasesDB 9058
eMedicine med/1644 derm/297 ped/1610
MeSH D009617

Nocardiosis is an infectious disease affecting either the lungs (pulmonary nocardiosis) or the whole body (systemic nocardiosis). It is due to infection by bacterium of the genus Nocardia, most commonly Nocardia asteroides or Nocardia brasiliensis.

It is most common in men, especially those with a weakened immune system. In patients with brain infection, mortality exceeds 80%; in other forms, mortality is 50%, even with appropriate therapy.[1]

It is one of several conditions that have been called the great imitator.[2] Cutaneous nocardiosis commonly occurs in immunocompetent hosts.[3]

Causes

Normally found in soil, these organisms cause occasional sporadic disease in humans and animals throughout the world. Another well publicized find is that of Nocardia as an oral microflora. Nocardia spp. have been reported in the normal gingiva and periodontal pockets along with other species such as Actinomyces, Arthromyces and Streptomyces spp.[4]

The usual mode of transmission is inhalation of organisms suspended in dust. Another very common method is that by traumatic introduction, especially in the jaw. This leads to the entrance of Nocardia into the blood stream and the propagation of its pathogenic effects. Transmission by direct inoculation through puncture wounds or abrasions is less common.[1] Generally, nocardial infection requires some degree of immune suppression.

Signs and symptoms

Pulmonary Infection

Neurological Infection

[5] [6] Cardiac Conditions

Lymphocutaneous disease

Ocular disease

Disseminated nocardiosis

Diagnosis

Diagnosis may be difficult. Nocardiae are gram positive weakly acid-fast branching rod-shaped bacteria and can be visualized by a modified Ziehl-Neelsen stain like Fite-Faraco method In the clinical laboratory, routine cultures may be held for insufficient time to grow nocardiae, and referral to a reference laboratory may be needed for species identification.[7] Infiltration and pleural effusion are usually seen via x-ray.

Treatment

Nocardiosis requires at least 6 months of treatment, preferably with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole or high doses of sulfonamides. In patients who do not respond to sulfonamide treatment, other drugs, such as ampicillin, erythromycin, or minocycline, may be added.

Treatment also includes surgical drainage of abscesses and excision of necrotic tissue. The acute phase requires complete bed rest; as the patient improves, activity can increase.[1]

A new combination drug therapy (sulfonamide, ceftriaxone, and amikacin) has also shown promise.[7]

References

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