{"title":"[Aspergillus flavus/oryzae Arthritis of the Knee Joint: First Case in Türkiye].","authors":"Selda Kömeç, İlgin Özden","doi":"10.5578/mb.20249702","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Aspergillus species are common hyphal fungi. In addition to allergies and mycotoxicosis, Aspergillus species can cause various infections known as aspergillosis. Aspergillosis of the respiratory tract, central nervous system, skin and soft tissues is well described. However, musculoskeletal infections due to invasive aspergillosis are not well described. Fungal joint infection due to invasive aspergillosis is a rare form of septic arthritis. In this case report, a patient who admitted to our hospital for liver transplantation and developed knee joint arthritis caused by Aspergillus flavus/Aspergillus oryzae during this process was presented. A 28-year-old male patient with autoimmune hepatitis was admitted to hospital with decompensated liver cirrhosis and encephalopathy. The patient, who was awaiting an emergency liver transplant, developed pain, swelling and limitation of movement in his right knee and appropriate consultations and tests were requested. Three joint fluid cultures taken one day apart and nine days later were positive for fungal growth. Macroscopic examination of the mould growth and microscopic examination with lactophenol cotton blue suggested a species belonging to the A.flavus complex and the isolate was identified as A.flavus/A.oryzae by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) (EXS 2600, Zybio, China). As a result of ITS gene sequencing, the species was determined to be A.oryzae. As cases have been reported where A.flavus and A.oryzae species could not be distinguished by ITS gene sequencing, the pathogen was defined as A.flavus/oryzae. The patient died of liver disease during treatment with amphotericin B. There are few cases of arthritis caused by Aspergillus species in the literature. Aspergillus species found in joint infections are, Aspergillus fumigatus, A.flavus, Aspergillus niger and Aspergillus terreus species complexes, in order of frequency. A.flavus and A.oryzae are closely related. They are difficult to distinguish by conventional methods, MALDI-TOF MS or ITS region sequencing, which is commonly used for genus/species identification in fungi. The number of Aspergillus arthritis cases is low and the identification methods applied to the species reported as causative agents in most studies can identify at the species complex level. In addition, it can be assumed that species not previously reported as causative agents may be encountered as a result of developments in identification methods. In the few publications in the literature where A.flavus complex was reported as the causative agent of joint infections, it seems possible that some of the agents may be A.flavus and some may be A.oryzae, since the agents were identified at the complex level. There are a limited number of cases in the literature where A.oryzae is the causative agent, particularly in the respiratory tract. A PubMed search using the keywords \"A.oryzae infections, arthritis, osteomyelitis\" did not reveal any literature on joint infections caused by A.oryzae.</p>","PeriodicalId":18509,"journal":{"name":"Mikrobiyoloji bulteni","volume":"58 3","pages":"344-352"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Mikrobiyoloji bulteni","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5578/mb.20249702","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"MICROBIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Aspergillus species are common hyphal fungi. In addition to allergies and mycotoxicosis, Aspergillus species can cause various infections known as aspergillosis. Aspergillosis of the respiratory tract, central nervous system, skin and soft tissues is well described. However, musculoskeletal infections due to invasive aspergillosis are not well described. Fungal joint infection due to invasive aspergillosis is a rare form of septic arthritis. In this case report, a patient who admitted to our hospital for liver transplantation and developed knee joint arthritis caused by Aspergillus flavus/Aspergillus oryzae during this process was presented. A 28-year-old male patient with autoimmune hepatitis was admitted to hospital with decompensated liver cirrhosis and encephalopathy. The patient, who was awaiting an emergency liver transplant, developed pain, swelling and limitation of movement in his right knee and appropriate consultations and tests were requested. Three joint fluid cultures taken one day apart and nine days later were positive for fungal growth. Macroscopic examination of the mould growth and microscopic examination with lactophenol cotton blue suggested a species belonging to the A.flavus complex and the isolate was identified as A.flavus/A.oryzae by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) (EXS 2600, Zybio, China). As a result of ITS gene sequencing, the species was determined to be A.oryzae. As cases have been reported where A.flavus and A.oryzae species could not be distinguished by ITS gene sequencing, the pathogen was defined as A.flavus/oryzae. The patient died of liver disease during treatment with amphotericin B. There are few cases of arthritis caused by Aspergillus species in the literature. Aspergillus species found in joint infections are, Aspergillus fumigatus, A.flavus, Aspergillus niger and Aspergillus terreus species complexes, in order of frequency. A.flavus and A.oryzae are closely related. They are difficult to distinguish by conventional methods, MALDI-TOF MS or ITS region sequencing, which is commonly used for genus/species identification in fungi. The number of Aspergillus arthritis cases is low and the identification methods applied to the species reported as causative agents in most studies can identify at the species complex level. In addition, it can be assumed that species not previously reported as causative agents may be encountered as a result of developments in identification methods. In the few publications in the literature where A.flavus complex was reported as the causative agent of joint infections, it seems possible that some of the agents may be A.flavus and some may be A.oryzae, since the agents were identified at the complex level. There are a limited number of cases in the literature where A.oryzae is the causative agent, particularly in the respiratory tract. A PubMed search using the keywords "A.oryzae infections, arthritis, osteomyelitis" did not reveal any literature on joint infections caused by A.oryzae.
曲霉菌是一种常见的半知菌。除了过敏和霉菌中毒外,曲霉菌还可引起各种感染,即曲霉菌病。呼吸道、中枢神经系统、皮肤和软组织的曲霉菌病已被详细描述。然而,由侵袭性曲霉菌病引起的肌肉骨骼感染却没有得到很好的描述。侵袭性曲霉菌病引起的真菌性关节感染是一种罕见的化脓性关节炎。在本病例报告中,我们介绍了一名入院接受肝脏移植手术的患者,他在手术过程中因黄曲霉菌/奥氏曲霉菌引起了膝关节关节炎。一名患有自身免疫性肝炎的 28 岁男性患者因肝硬化失代偿期和脑病入院。患者正在等待紧急肝脏移植手术,他的右膝盖出现疼痛、肿胀和活动受限,因此要求进行适当的会诊和检查。相隔一天和九天后进行的三次关节液培养均显示真菌生长呈阳性。霉菌生长的宏观检查和用乳酚棉蓝进行的显微镜检查表明,该菌株属于黄曲霉菌群,并通过基质辅助激光解吸电离质谱(MALDI-TOF MS)(EXS 2600,Zybio,中国)鉴定为黄曲霉/奥里泽。通过 ITS 基因测序,确定该物种为 A.oryzae。ITS 基因测序无法区分黄曲霉和奥里泽霉的病例也有报道,因此病原体被定义为黄曲霉/奥里泽霉。该患者在接受两性霉素 B 治疗期间死于肝病。在关节感染中发现的曲霉菌依次为烟曲霉、黄曲霉、黑曲霉和土曲霉菌群。黄曲霉和黑曲霉关系密切。传统方法、MALDI-TOF MS 或 ITS 区域测序(通常用于真菌属/种的鉴定)都很难将它们区分开来。曲霉关节炎病例的数量较少,而大多数研究中对报告为致病菌的菌种所采用的鉴定方法可以在菌种复合水平上进行鉴定。此外,我们还可以假设,由于鉴定方法的发展,可能会遇到以前未被报告为致病菌的菌种。在少数报道黄曲霉菌复合体是关节感染病原体的文献中,由于病原体是在复合体水平上鉴定的,因此似乎有些病原体可能是黄曲霉菌,有些可能是oryzae。在文献中,A.oryzae 是致病菌的病例数量有限,尤其是在呼吸道。在PubMed上以 "A.oryzae感染、关节炎、骨髓炎 "为关键词进行搜索,没有发现任何关于A.oryzae引起关节感染的文献。
期刊介绍:
Bulletin of Microbiology is the scientific official publication of Ankara Microbiology Society. It is published quarterly in January, April, July and October. The aim of Bulletin of Microbiology is to publish high quality scientific research articles on the subjects of medical and clinical microbiology. In addition, review articles, short communications and reports, case reports, editorials, letters to editor and other training-oriented scientific materials are also accepted. Publishing language is Turkish with a comprehensive English abstract. The editorial policy of the journal is based on independent, unbiased, and double-blinded peer-review. Specialists of medical and/or clinical microbiology, infectious disease and public health, and clinicians and researchers who are training and interesting with those subjects, are the target groups of Bulletin of Microbiology.