|
Home | Issues | eMJA shop | Classifieds | Contact | More... | Topics | Search | Login | Buy full access |
→ Previous article in this issue
→ Contents list for this issue
→ More articles on Infectious diseases and parasitology
→ More articles on Respiratory medicine
→ Search PubMed for related articles
Correction: This article was published with an incorrect image in Box 3, which should have shown the histological appearance of a liver biopsy, not the published lung biopsy. The mistake was corrected on 20 October 2003.
Patricia A Figgis,* Allan R Glanville,† John L Harkness‡
* Thoracic Registrar (currently, Senior Registrar, General Intensive Care, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Missenden Road, Camperdown, NSW, 2050); † Head of Thoracic Medicine, ‡ Director of Microbiology, St Vincent's Hospital, Darlinghurst, NSW. patriciafiggisAThotmail.com
To the Editor: A previously well 57-year-old man presented to the emergency department with a 3-day history of severe dyspnoea. Six weeks earlier he had noticed coryzal symptoms with subsequent lethargy, reduced appetite with weight loss, and a non-productive cough. He then developed ankle swelling and increasing abdominal girth. He had a background of excessive alcohol consumption, but had abstained for 10 years.
On examination, he was febrile and in respiratory distress, with a respiratory rate of 35 per minute, pulse rate of 130 bpm, and blood pressure of 130/85 mmHg. Chest auscultation revealed bilateral diffuse coarse crackles. The chest x-ray is shown in Box 1, and results of additional investigations in Box 2.
Despite treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics (intravenous ceftriaxone, dicloxacillin and erythromycin), the patient’s condition deteriorated rapidly, and he required intubation within 24 hours of presentation. Trap sputa contained abundant thin, partially acid-fast, beaded, branching filaments, suggesting Nocardia asteroides, which was later confirmed on culture using conventional biochemical testing. Several blood cultures taken on admission also grew N. asteroides. All cultures for mycobacteria were negative. The patient was treated with intravenous trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole for a total of 5 weeks and oral minocycline for 14 weeks. He spent 6 weeks in hospital.
Liver biopsy, performed because of persistently abnormal hepatic function at follow-up 8 weeks after hospital discharge, showed central fibrosis and non-caseating granulomatous hepatitis (Box 3). The patientn received no further treatment and remained well 18 months later, with almost normal hepatic function and a clear chest x-ray.
Nocardia bacteraemia is rare, although the incidence appears to be increasing in the immunosuppressed. Nocardia spp. are seldom isolated in blood cultures, with one study finding that blood was the source of only 8% of all Nocardia isolates.1 Up to 30% of patients with Nocardia bacteraemia have coexistent infection with gram-negative bacteria.1,2 There has been one previous report of Nocardia pneumonia associated with positive blood cultures and liver disease. However, this patient had documented end-stage chronic liver disease at presentation, was taking prednisolone, and developed nocardiosis after prolonged hospitalisation with gram-negative sepsis.1
Granulomatous reactions are well described in Nocardia infection. Although granulomatous hepatitis is also described in sarcoidosis, it is rare and usually presents with itch and obstructive abnormalities of liver function.4
In our patient, acute N. asteroides infection was the most likely cause of both the pulmonary infiltrate and the granulomatous hepatitis. Not only were results of modified acid-fast stains consistent with Nocardia spp., but cultures from multiple trap sputa and blood specimens also grew N. asteroides, suggesting a large load of this organism. No other organisms were isolated despite prolonged incubation of cultures, and the patient recovered after specific treatment directed at Nocardia spp. Furthermore, he remained well with no further treatment at 18-month follow-up, with near-normal hepatic function and no new abnormalities.
We conclude that N. asteroides infection can present as a fulminant community-acquired pneumonia with bacteraemia in the absence of immunosuppression or coexistent infection. Our case illustrates the potential hepatic sequelae of Nocardia bacteraemia.
1: Chest x-ray of a patient with Nocardia asteroides pneumonia

Chest x-ray taken on admission to hospital, showing widespread non-symmetrical interstitial and airspace infiltrates.
2: Results of investigations
|
Result | Reference range |
|||||||||
At presentation |
|
|
|||||||||
Arterial blood gases* |
|
|
|||||||||
pH |
7.37 |
7.35 –7.45 |
|||||||||
pCO2 (mmHg) |
43 |
35 – 45 |
|||||||||
pO2 (mmHg) |
60 |
75 –105 |
|||||||||
Bicarbonate (mmol/L) |
24 |
24 – 31 |
|||||||||
Base excess |
0 |
− 3 to 3 |
|||||||||
White cell count |
|
|
|||||||||
Total (x 109/L) |
31.5† |
4 –11 |
|||||||||
Neutrophils (x 109/L) |
30.2 |
2 – 7.5 |
|||||||||
Lymphocytes (x 109/L) |
0.7 |
2 – 4 |
|||||||||
Follow-up at 8 weeks |
|
|
|||||||||
Liver function tests‡ |
|
|
|||||||||
Bilirubin (μmol/L) |
9 |
< 18 |
|||||||||
Alkaline phosphatase (U/L) |
124 |
30 –100 |
|||||||||
γ-Glutamyl transferase (U/L) |
153 |
< 35 |
|||||||||
Iron studies |
|
|
|||||||||
Serum ferritin (μg/L) |
446 |
30 – 400 |
|||||||||
Serum iron (μmol/L) |
< 3 |
10 – 30 |
|||||||||
Transferrin (g/L) |
1.9 |
2.0 – 3.5 |
|||||||||
Transferrin saturation |
< 6% |
15%–50% |
|||||||||
Vitamin B12 (pmol/L) |
376 |
> 126 |
|||||||||
Immunological tests |
|
|
|||||||||
HIV antibodies |
Negative |
|
|||||||||
Hepatitis B and C§ |
Negative |
|
|||||||||
Autoantibody screen¶ |
Negative |
|
|||||||||
Complement C3 (g/L) |
1.07 |
0.82 –1.45 |
|||||||||
Complement C4 (g/L) |
0.25 |
0.15–0.45 |
|||||||||
* Breathing 10 L/min oxygen. † Occasional myelocytes, toxic granulation. ‡ Levels of alanine and aspartate aminotransferase were in the reference range. § Including hepatitis B surface antigen and hepatitis C antibody. ¶ Including antinuclear, extractable nuclear antigen, double-stranded DNA and antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies. |
|||||||||||
©The Medical Journal of Australia 2003 www.mja.com.au Print ISSN: 0025-729X Online ISSN: 1326-5377
Patricia A Figgis, John L Harkness and Allan R Glanville. Correction: Nocardia asteroides pneumonia with bacteraemia Med J Aust 2003; 179 (8): 447. [Correction] <http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/179_08_201003/figgis_correction_201003-2.html>
|
Home | Issues | eMJA shop | Terms of use | Classifieds | More... | Contact | Topics | Search |