Authors: Carrie A. Flynn, MS1; Emilie O鈥橬eill, MD2; Sumit R. Kumar, MD, MPA2; Anna Dill, MD2; Abhay J. Dhond, MD, MPH, F91黑料网2
Author Affiliations: 1Medical Scientist Training Program, Yale School of Medicine; 2Yale Primary Care Internal Medicine Residency Program, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine
Introduction: The most pathogenic rapidly growing mycobacteria (RGM), Mycobacterium abscessus is a rare cause of human infection despite its ubiquity in the environment. Consisting of the subspecies abscessus, massiliense, and bolletii, 1 M. abscessus is characterized by biofilm formation and intrinsic resistance to many disinfectants, qualities which have led to postsurgical infections through contamination of surgical equipment and injection solutions2-4. The rise of medical tourism among US patients, especially for cosmetic procedures, has led to a rise in M. abscessus infections, presenting an important public health problem in the US5-8. This problem is complicated by challenges physicians face in diagnosing and adequately treating these infections1,9-11.
Case Presentation
This case regards a 36-year-old woman who presented to the emergency department (ED) with lower abdominal pain and swelling over her surgical site, where 2 weeks prior she had undergone abdominoplasty and liposuction in the Dominican Republic. She also noted increased output from a drain placed during the surgery. On initial evaluation, the patient was afebrile and tachycardic to the low 100s with otherwise stable vitals. Physical exam and laboratory findings were grossly within normal limits. A CT of the abdomen revealed skin induration and thickening thought to be consistent with wound healing, and she was discharged home. Over the next month, the patient visited the ED three more times as well as her primary care physician (PCP) and an outpatient plastic surgeon with worsening pain and swelling, but infection was not suspected. At her final ED visit she was mildly febrile prompting a repeat abdominal CT scan which revealed development of multiple abscesses in the ventral abdominal wall. She was admitted, underwent Interventional Radiology-guided drainage of the abscesses, and was initially started on empiric broad spectrum antibiotics. When culture Results: returned with M. abscessus, the patient was started on clarithromycin, amikacin, and cefoxitin with improvement in her symptoms and discharged to outpatient care with her PCP and an Infectious Disease specialist.
Discussion
This case highlights many of the issues physicians and public health agencies face when caring for medical tourists, from drains or hardware that may be placed without clear instructions for follow up to infections with otherwise uncommon etiologies. As in this patient's case, the presentation of nontuberculous mycobacteria can be subtle and insidious, and medical tourism can result in outbreaks outside of traditional geographic distributions. Additionally, gram staining and standard cultures are not sensitive for this pathogen, and most clinical microbiology laboratories are unable to distinguish between subspecies of M. abscessus or conduct sensitivity testing. Together, this can make diagnosis difficult and delay treatment. As medical tourism and its health consequences become increasingly common in the US, more comprehensive reporting of cases like this is an important objective.
References
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