1. Introduction
Non-typhoidal salmonellosis has emerged as an invasive infection in industrialized countries. Bacteremia and pleuropulmonary involvement usually occurs in the setting of chronic illnesses such as diabetes, malignancies and HIV. We present three cases of non-typhoidal salmonellosis in immunocompetent patients presenting over a year period.
2. Patient 1
A 66-years-old white female presented with three day history of nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. Her past medical history was positive for COPD, hypertension and chronic kidney disease secondary to congenital solitary kidney. She never had prior episodes of severe gastroenteritis. She did not report gall bladder disease or significant tra- vel history. She did not report animal exposure except having a pet cat. She and her husband denied consump- tion of raw milk and undercooked foods. She stayed home most of the time due to her chronic back pain and her husband did all the cooking and shopping. She also denied any sick contacts. She took nexium for GERD. Gen- eral physical examination revealed a pale and toxic appearing lady with hypotension but no fever. She was le- thargic but able to respond to questions. She did not exhibit any focal signs such as abdominal tenderness, ab- normal breath sounds or new murmur. On laboratory evaluation, she was found to have acute kidney injury with BUN 132 and Creatinine 8.1 (Table 1). Urinalysis showed pyuria. Blood and urine cultures grew Gram negative rods which were identified as Salmonella enteridis. Infection control services were also contacted. Her immu- nodeficiency workup was negative. CT scan abdomen was unremarkable.
Soon after admission, her mental status progressively declined and she was intubated for airway protection. Her CXR showed right basilar pulmonary markings due to infiltrate.
Her bronchoalveolar lavage also grew Salmonella enteridis. CT head and Lumbar puncture were negative. Stool culture was negative. She eventually became hemodynamically stable, her delirium got better with atypi- cal antipsychotics and she was discharged after completing a two week course of Ceftriaxone.
3. Patient 2
A 58-year-old female with history of diabetes, asthma and chronic idiopathic ITP presented with three day his- tory of fever, pleuritic chest pain and shortness of breath. She also reported a recent history of diarrhea. She lived in a trailer and also ate a lot at fast food restaurants. She denied consumption of raw eggs or possessing
any pets such as reptiles and birds. She did admit to taking nexium for gastroesophageal reflux. Her vitals showed a temperature of 39.1˚C but no hemodynamic instability or hypoxemia. Physical examination demon- strated bilateral reduced air entry at bases along with crackles. CT chest showed bilateral pleural effusions, left significantly bigger than right (Figure 1).
She underwent left sided pigtail catheter drainage and 300 cc of turbid looking pleural fluid was sent for analysis that showed a pH of 5.7 with neutrophilic pleocytosis. Fluid chemistry showed glucose of 7 mg/dl, LDH of 1775 U/L and Protein of 4.4 consistent with empyema. Pleural fluid cultures grew Salmonella Group D. She later required large bore chest tube drainage which was removed before discharge. Her blood and stool cul- tures remained negative. Her hospital course was complicated by acute kidney injury requiring temporary he- modialysis. She was treated with Ceftriaxone for a total of two weeks. Her immunodeficiency workup was neg- ative.
4. Patient 3
A 62-year-old male hundred pack year smoking history presented with acute onset left lower quadrant abdominal pain and diarrhea. Three weeks prior to presentation, he had similar pain in the right lower quadrant and was treated for acute diverticulitis with ten days of antibiotics. Other co-morbidities included COPD, atrial fibrilla- tion, congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease s/p multiple PCI, diabetes and chronic kidney disease. He did not report any history of peripheral vascular disease. His vital signs were stable on examination and his overall physical exam was non-focal except mild tenderness in the left lower quadrant of the abdomen without guarding or rebound tenderness. CT abdomen showed 4 cm soft tissue attenuation anterior to the L3 vertebral body in the retroaortic region suspicious for mycotic aneurysm of the abdominal aorta (Figure 2 and Figure 3).
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Figure 1. Large left sided pleural effusion with small right sided effusion.
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Figure 2. An axial view of abdomen at level of L3 vertebra showing posterior extravasation of blood in a saccular cavity consistent with mycotic aneurysm of the abdominal aorta (arrow).
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Figure 3. Coronal view of abdomen at level of L3 vertebra showing lateral extravasation of blood along with disruption of arterial wall calcium consistent aneurysmal dilatation of the ab- dominal aorta (arrow).
Blood cultures turned positive for Salmonella Group D resistant to cephalosporins and bactrim but sensitive to carbapenems. He was started on meropenem and then deescalated to ertapenem once daily. His hospital stay was complicated by acute respiratory failure requiring intubation. He was also treated for health care associated pneumonia and pleural effusion, however bronchoalveolar lavage, pleural fluid and stool culture did not grow Salmonella species. His echocardiogram did not show any valvular abnormality. He also denied any epidemi- ologic risk factors for salmonellosis. Immunodeficiency workup and treponema serologies were negative. He was evaluated by vascular surgery service who deferred surgical intervention to a later date secondary to his com- plicated medical course. He completed a six week course of intravenous ertapenem and subsequent blood cul- tures remained negative.
5. Discussion
Nontyphoidal Salmonellae are important causes of reportable foodborne infection. Salmonellae are problematic, even in modestly compromised hosts, as a result of bacteremic spread, focal infection and persistence in deep or endovascular sites. Approximately 45,000 cases and 400 - 600 deaths have been reported annually to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC; Atlanta) over the past decade, the tip of a large iceberg representing an estimated 1 - 3 million total cases. Salmonellae have a wide range of hosts and are strongly associated with agricultural prod- ucts [1] . The increasing centralization and industrialization of our food supply have enhanced the distribution of these hardy organisms. Acquisition of Salmonella from pets (e.g., reptiles and birds), direct personal contact, nosocomial transmission, waterborne transmission and contaminated drugs and solutions are less common modes of transmission [2] . None of our three patients reported any exposure with any of these common modes of trans- mission.
Approximately 5% of individuals with gastrointestinal illness caused by nontyphoidal Salmonella will devel- op bacteremia. Bacteremia is more likely to occur in immunocompromised patients, and these hosts are also more likely to develop focal infection. This reflects both the tenacity of the organism and the comorbidities of these individuals. In a study from Spain of 172 cases of nontyphoidal Salmonella bacteremia observed over a decade, 16% of patients developed septic metastases and 16% of them died [3] . A feared complication of Sal- monella bacteremia in adults is development of infectious endarteritis, especially that which involves the abdo- minal aorta. Previously, this was almost uniformly fatal, but a review of 148 evaluable cases seen from 1948 through 1999 found a 62% survival rate for all patients treated with combined surgical and medical therapy and a 77% survival rate for 30 patients who were able to undergo extra-anatomical bypass with construction of an axillobifemoral graft [4] .
All of our patients reported some antecedent gastrointestinal symptoms, however, none of them had stool cul- ture proven Salmonella gastroenteritis. Salmonellosis is a food borne illness and the portal of entry of this or- ganism is, indeed, gastrointestinal tract. However, in a study involving patients with bacteremia, only one fourth of cases presented with symptoms of gastroenteritis [5] .
Out first patient was not immunocompromised although she had COPD, however, she did not require recur- rent courses of systemic steroid. She also had chronic kidney disease due to presence of solitary kidney. The only apparent risk factor for salmonellosis was use of proton pump inhibitor which has been known to increase the risk for Salmonella gastroenteritis.
Pleuropulmonary infections secondary to non-typhoid Salmonella are extremely rare, with only a few cases reported in the last few decades. Only 39 cases of non-typhi Salmonella-infected empyemas had been reported up until 2005 [6] . Our patient had a history of splenectomy secondary to chronic idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura which may have predisposed her to invasive Salmonella infection. Interestingly, none of her blood cul- tures grew this organism.
Our third patient had diabetes, chronic kidney disease and steroid dependent COPD which would predispose one to invasive salmonellosis, however the classic predisposing factors for nontyphoidal Salmonella bacteremia has been presence of malignancy, diabetes, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and systemic lupus erythe- matosis [5] .
Disclosure
Dr. Kashif Hussain has received educational grants from Boehringer ingelheim to develop online web courses on ASTHMA and COPD for West Virginia educational foundation. Dr. Najmuddin and Dr. Khan have no fi- nancial disclosures.