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Archive Number 20090629.2346
Published Date 29-JUN-2009
Subject PRO/EDR> Chromobacterium violaceum infection - USA: (NC)

CHROMOBACTERIUM VIOLACEUM INFECTION - USA: (NORTH CAROLINA)
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Date: Fri 26 Jun 2009
Source: WWAY NewsChannel 3 (North Carolina), Associated Press (AP) report 
[edited]
<http://www.wwaytv3.com/nc_teenager_hospitalized_rare_infection/06/2009>


A 14 year old boy from North Carolina is in hospital with a rare infection 
that cost him part of his nose and 5 teeth after swimming in a local lake. 
The Fayetteville Observer reports that doctors at UNC [University of North 
Carolina] Hospitals in Chapel Hill are treating the boy for an infection 
caused by a bacterium called _Chromobacterium violaceum_, which was found 
in Hope Mills Lake.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that fewer than 150 
cases have been reported worldwide since 1927.

The patient's father said his son is in serious condition but that 
antibiotics are beginning to clear the infection from the teen's blood. 
Doctors had to remove the left side of [his] nose and palate, and his 
father said he lost 5 teeth. Brian McKinney said doctors won't consider 
reconstructive surgery until the infection is gone.

-- 
communicated by:
ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>

[_Chromobacterium violaceum_ infection is typically found in tropical areas 
and was first described by Wooley in 1905 as an infection in dead and dying 
water buffalo in the Philippines (1). The 1st human case was described from 
Malaysia in 1927. Most cases are reported during the summer months and are 
commonly, as in this posting, associated with water exposure. The infection 
may be more likely to occur in patients who are immunodeficient, 
particularly those with chronic granulomatous disease. Most infections are 
associated with multiple cutaneous and visceral abscesses and may be 
associated with concomitant septic shock (2). This type of presentation in 
a patient from a tropical environment and water exposure also suggests the 
possibility of melioidosis (_Burkholderia pseudomallei_ infection).

 From the description of the significant morbidity in this young man, it 
appears that the organism has caused a necrotizing soft tissue infection. 
Of note, a previously reported case of _C. violaceum_ linked to a (not 
specified) North Carolina lake resulted in a necrotizing skin infection (3).

References
----------
1. Wooley PG. _Bacillus violaceum manilae_ (a pathogenic organism). Bull 
Johns Hopkins Hosp 1905; 16: 89.
2. Jitmuang A. Human _Chromobacterium violaceum_ infection in Southeast 
Asia: case reports and literature review. Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public 
Health 2008; 39: 452-60 [abstract available at 
<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18564684>].
3. Brown KL, Stein A, Morrell DS. Ecthyma gangrenosum and septic shock 
syndrome secondary to _Chromobacterium violaceum_. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006; 
54: S224-8 [abstract available at 
<http://www.eblue.org/article/S0190-9622(05)02290-5/abstract>]. - Mod.LL

Hope Mills Lake is a reservoir in Cumberland County in the state of North 
Carolina, USA. It can be seen via the HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map 
at <http://healthmap.org/r/00uN>. - Sr.Tech.Ed.MJ]

.................mhj/ll/mj/sh


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