A 55-year old man presented with a two-day history of headache, fever and generalized weakness. He had received a cadaveric kidney transplant 5 years earlier. His medications included 5 mg oftacrolimus twice a day and 10 mg of prednisone daily. On neurologic examination, he was confused and incoherent Cranial nerves were normal, but he had a hazy left retina. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain with the administration of gadolinium showed multiple enhancing lesion in both cerebral hemispheres. The most probable diagnosis is –
Correct Answer: Nocardia asteroides infection
Description: Nocardiosis is an infectious disease affecting either the lungs (pulmonary nocardiosis) or the whole body (systemic nocardiosis). It is due to infection by a bacterium of the genus Nocardia, most commonly Nocardia asteroides or Nocardia brasiliensis. It is most common in adult males, especially those with a weakened immune system. In patients with brain nocardia infection, moality exceeds 80%; in other forms, moality is 50%, even with appropriate therapy. It is one of several conditions that have been called "the great imitator". Cutaneous nocardiosis commonly occurs in immunocompetent hosts Signs and symptoms Pulmonary infection Produces a virulent form of pneumonia (progressive) Night sweats, fever, cough, chest pain Pulmonary nocardiosis is subacute in onset and refractory to treatment with standard antibiotics Symptoms are more severe in immunocompromised individuals Radiologic studies show multiple pulmonary infiltrates, with a tendency to central necrosis Neurological infection: Headache, lethargy, confusion, seizures, sudden onset of neurological deficit CT scan shows cerebral abscess Nocardial meningitis is difficult to diagnose Cardiac conditions: Nocardia has been highly linked to endocarditis as a main manifestation In recorded cases, it has caused damage to hea valves whether natural or prosthetic Lymphocutaneous disease: Nocardial cellulitis is akin to erysipelas but is less acute Nodular lymphangeitis mimics sporotrichosis with multiple nodules alongside a lymphatic pathway Chronic subcutaneous infection is a rare complication and osteitis may ensue May be misidentified and treated as a staph infection, specifically superficial skin infections Cultures must incubate more than 48 hours to guarantee an accurate test Ocular disease: Very rarely, nocardiae cause keratitis Generally there is a history of ocular trauma Disseminated nocardiosis: Dissemination occurs through the spreading enzymes possessed by the bacteria Disseminated infection can occur in very immunocompromised patients It generally involves both lungs and brain Fever, moderate or very high can be seen Multiple cavitating pulmonary infiltrates develop Cerebral abscesses arise later Cutaneous lesions are very rarely seen If untreated, the prognosis is poor for this form of disease Ref Davidson 23rd edition pg 712
Category:
Medicine
Get More
Subject Mock Tests
Practice with over 200,000 questions from various medical subjects and improve your knowledge.
Attempt a mock test nowMock Exam
Take an exam with 100 random questions selected from all subjects to test your knowledge.
Coming SoonGet More
Subject Mock Tests
Try practicing mock tests with over 200,000 questions from various medical subjects.
Attempt a mock test now