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109207

Lobar Pneumonia in a Farmer Responded to Anti-melioidosis Antibiotics

Article

Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

Subjects

-

Tags

Infectious diseases

Abstract

A 46-year-old male, farmer, with no prior medical illness presented with a one-month history of intermittent right-sided pleuritic chest pain and productive cough. He complained of fever and breathlessness 3 days before current presentation to the district hospital. He denied any haemoptysis, night sweats, or contact with pulmonary tuberculosis. On examination, the vital signs were normal and lung auscultation revealed bronchial breath sounds and crepitation over the right upper zone. Chest radiograph demonstrated a right upper lobe consolidation with presence of air bronchogram and abdominal ultrasonography was normal. He was admitted for intravenous antibiotic therapy for a presumptive diagnosis of community-acquired pneumonia. He was initially treated with intravenous amoxicillin-clavulanic acid 1.2 g every 8 hours. Differential diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis was also considered but later ruled out as the sputum for direct smear microscopy, GenXpert and culture for Mycobacterium tuberculosis were negative. The melioidosis IgM (ELISA), multiple blood and sputum cultures were also negative.
A PCR-based confirmatory test for melioidosis was however not available at our setting. In the ward, he continued to have persistent fever and repeated chest radiograph after 1 week of antibiotic showed worsening of right upper lobe consolidation. At this point in time, melioidosis was suspected due to the risk factor of farming. Antibiotic was then changed to intravenous ceftazidime 2 g every 6 hours. The patient responded positively as evidenced by the resolution of fever and respiratory symptoms, and repeated chest radiograph showed improving consolidation at 2 weeks. He was discharged after completing a 2-week course of intravenous ceftazidime, and simultaneously started on oral trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole as eradication therapy. Upon review in the outpatient clinic 6 weeks later, chest radiograph showed marked improvement with minimal residual right upper lobe consolidation. He was clinically well and did not show any symptoms of relapse. He was planned for eradication therapy of 20 weeks' duration.
 

DOI

10.21608/aeji.2020.30749.1085

Keywords

Melioidosis, pneumonia, Burkholderia pseudomallei

Authors

First Name

Chee Yik

Last Name

Chang

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Sarawak General Hospital

Email

ccyik28@gmail.com

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

10

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

16766

Issue Date

2020-09-01

Receive Date

2020-05-21

Publish Date

2020-09-01

Page Start

323

Page End

326

Print ISSN

2090-7613

Online ISSN

2090-7184

Link

https://aeji.journals.ekb.eg/article_109207.html

Detail API

https://aeji.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=109207

Order

18

Type

Case report

Type Code

622

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Afro-Egyptian Journal of Infectious and Endemic Diseases

Publication Link

https://aeji.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

-

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023